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THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL 






ALAKA SHANKAR 


: 


mm 
























































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THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL 

RIVERS OF INDIA 


ALAKA SHANKAR 


kg 


PUBLICATIONS DIVISION 

MINISTRY OF INFORMATION & BROADCASTING 

GOVT. OF INDIA 



2002 (Saka 1923) 


© PUBLICATIONS DIVISION 

ISBN : 81-230-0913-5 
Price : Rs. 105.00 

Published by the Director General, Publications Division, 

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Preface 


The sound of gurgling stream in a deep, thick forest becons travellers 
to dip their tired fet in its cool, cool water. Bubbling, gliding, severing, 
the stream stirs happy memories of childhood, of youth, of the many happy 
years gone past. It rustles up dreams-airy and imaginative-of the future 
that is yet to s % ee and to think the creator of these wonderful images is 
none other than an unubiquitous colourless, formless, odourless liquid? 
A mere oxide of hydrogen. A new chemical? Yes, water is that fantastic, 
magical substance-the very maternal of life itself. 

You know, our earth is three fourths water and only one part land. 
The rivers, the streams, the lakes, the ponds, the brooks are all different 
bodies all originating from one source—the ocean. They branch out from 
this main water source and go back...in time...much with its experience 
of the countries, the lands, the climes, the people, their culture and the 
invaluable heritage of the years gone by. India abounds in rivers. 
Transcending from the peaks of the Himalayas—their waters merge into 
the many seas landscaping the continent and finally into the Indian Ocean. 
As you stand on the banks of any river, and stare into its flowing water, 
you can read the story of its glorious past. It may be a big river or a 
small one—it has a personality of its own, as distinct as the land through 
which it flows. 

Presented here is the story of The Mighty and Mystical Rivers of 
India—the main arteries of sustenance, throbbing with hope and life. The 
effort is to give in simple details the richness and importance of their 
presence. Let us hope the book will prompt you to explore and seek 
more and get the maximum out of our rivers. 

July, 2001 Alaka Shankar 

C-686, New Friends Colony 
New Delhi 








I 


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About The Author 


Ms. Alaka Shankar, the author, is a writer of repute. 

Writing on varied subjects she has established a versatility in 
treatment. Her published books include, amongst others, Indira 
Priyadarshini , Forever Nehru , Shankar , in the class of biographies. 
Picture books and Adventure books have been her forte, prominent 
among them being, Sonali's Friend , We have New Friends , and The Big 
Catch. 

She has been a broadcaster and has also created over a hundred 
cassettes on diverse subjects of literary and cultural interests for children. 
Specialized in Public Relations Ms.Alaka Shankar is a writer with 
many facets. 
















Contents 


Introduction 1 

1. What is a River? 5 

2. Himalayas - Abode of the Gods 14 

3. The Vast Expanse Across the Horizon 18 

4. The Sacred Ganga 33 

5. Yamuna - The Black Goddess 44 

6. Civilization along the Ganga 50 

7. The Fertile Gangetic Plains 65 

8. The Mighty Brahmaputra 69 

9. Indus - The Mountain Lioness 76 

10. Sutlej - The Fast Runner 82 

11. And the Mahanadi Meanders 88 

12. Narmada - The Jata Shankari 91 

13. Godavari - The Dakshina Ganga 101 

14. Krishna — The Inland River 107 

15. Kaveri - The River of Life 114 

16. The Smaller Rivers - A Source of Livelihood 125 

17. Save Our Rivers - A Warning! A Plea? 


132 





















































Introduction 


F rom early childhood, I have been fascinated by nature and its 
bounties—the awesome mountains and their mysteries—the birds 
and animals in all shapes and colours, living among the majestic trees 
and wild flowers; the vast ocean and its deep secrets, the endless desert 
sands stretching out to the horizon and even the changing hues of the 
sky, sometimes lined by a row of birds in flight and sometimes the 
appearance of rolling clouds bursting into thunder and lightning and 
pouring down as rain. How beautiful it all is! The more I experience it, 
the more enchanted I am and it becomes an endless search, to discover 
more and more of this beautiful world of ours. 

The sound of a gurgling stream in a cool dim forest always draws 
hikers to dip their feet in the clear cool water which flows along with 
a sound like rustling leaves, sometimes turning to a foaming white cascade 
and falling down in the ripples of a deep pool. Bubbling, glinting and 
swirling through the thickets, the stream plays a game of hide and seek 
and suddenly disappears from sight around the bend. 

Water, without which there would be no life on earth. But what is 
water? Where does it come from? How is it formed? What is its source? 
Yes, it is so common that we take it for granted. And yet, it is one of 
the most amazing and most rare materials in the whole wide universe. 

What is water? Water is that rare commodity on earth that can be 
found in three forms. It is found in the form of liquid as you see in a 
river or a lake or an ocean, it can be solid as you see in the form of ice 
and it can also be a gas, which you find in steam or the water vapour of 

a cloud. 




2 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


And did you know that water is also a powerful chemical? You may 
put it in various strong and tough metals and in due course of time, the 
water will dissolve them! Water is that fantastic magical substance which 
is the very material of life itself! 

Water-the colourless, odourless liquid that descends from the clouds 
as rain, forms streams, lakes and seas, is a major constituent of all living 
matter. It is an oxide of Hydrogen which freezes at 0 degrees centigrade, 
and boils at 100 degrees centigrade, is the explanation you will find in 
most dictionaries. 

Water is what we drink, wash in, cook with, swim in; it falls from 
the sky as rain. The RIVER also is water. The ocean also is water. And 
yet they are formed differently. Let us first find out how the ocean was 
formed. 

Scientist tell us that our earth was formed more than four and a half 
billion years ago. For a long time, it had no water on its surface. Its inside 
was so hot that it was a boiling liquid. Its outer surface too, was so hot 
that even a drop of water touching it, would surely have evaporated. 

Well, over the years, the outside of the earth cooled off. Some 
scientists are of the opinion that when the earth cooled enough, the water 
vapour in the atmosphere changed into water and fell to earth as rain. 
It would have rained for a long time! And gradually, all the low parts of 
the earth would have filled up with water. 

Yet, another group of scientists think that when the earth's surface 
started cooling, steam came rushing up through volcanoes and geysers, 
which we find even today. And when this steam hit the cool air, it changed 
into water. The water then ran downhill and over hundreds and millions 
of years, it filled up the lowest parts of the earth's rocky crust. 

And so, the theory is disputed, whether the sea could have been formed 
by tremendous rains or it may have been formed by steam from inside 
the earth. By studying the earth's rocks and their chemistry, a few scientists 
also believe that the sea could have been formed in one of these two ways 
or a combination of both. 

The sea unfolds a story of discovery and trade, adventure and 


INTRODUCTION 


3 


exploration, of strange creatures and corals and weeds and flowers. When 
you stare at the sea you will recall some of the stories you have heard 
or read, of ships and boats that crossed it and of the dangerous risks and 
high adventures undertaken by the travellers. 

And did you know, that most of the rain and snow that make our 
existence possible, comes from the sea? And how is that possible? 

The heat of the sun causes a great deal of the water on the surface 
of the sea to evaporate and become a gas. This wind carries the clouds 
over the land. When these clouds move to a cooler region, the water vapor 
turns into droplets of water and fall down as rain or snow. 

So you see, without the sea, there would be no rain and without rain 
there would be no life on earth. The snow from the mountain-tops melts 
and trickles down the mountain sides to become streams, rivulets, 
tributaries and finally a river. The rain and snow that falls down on earth 
soak into the ground and provide the moisture which is required by the 
plants to survive. 

Without rain or snow there would be no fresh water and also no 
plants. And if there was no fresh water to drink or plants to eat, how would 
animals and human beings survive? Water is as essential to plants and 
animals as it is to human beings. It makes up over 70% of the body weight 
of a man. Since all chemical reactions of life process can take place only 
in the presence of water, no living thing can exist without it. A moderately 
active man must drink about five and a half pints of liquid a day. But beyond 
this basic biological requirement, we need water for many other purposes. 
As cities grow, and population increases, the need for water also increases. 

Have I set your mind ticking about this wonderful world we live in? 
Have you begun to delve into the mystery of our universe? Have you got 
ensnared by the wonders of nature? The more we seek, the more we will 
find and discover. 

As I stand on the banks of the Ganga and stare into the deep flowing 
waters, my thoughts wander once again into the glorious past of our 
country, its history, its people, its culture, its heritage. Yes, the great and 


4 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


mighty Ganga silently flowing by, was witness to it all, through the 
centuries! 

When you cross a river by boat or over a bridge, will you stop and 
think a while? Of its rich history, its mythological stories, the battles 
won along its banks, the towns and temples built along its course, the 
trade, the agricultural boom, and so much more. The knowledge you will 
gain will be fathomless. Seek and you will find it. 

I dedicate my book to all the great and small rivers of our country, 
the rivers that are the pulse and life of our people. This book is a story 
of the rivers of India. And I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed 
writing it. 


1 

What is a River? 


I ndia abounds in rivers. Transcending down from the peaks of the 
Himalayas, the Ganga, Yamuna, Brahmaputra, Sutlej, Indus and Jhelum 
and many of their tributaries wind their way across the northern states 
and merge into the Arabian Sea or the Bay of Bengal. And from the Vindhya 
Ranges in central India, the Narmada, Krishna, Kaveri, Godavari and their 
tributries spread a web across the eastern and southern states of the 
country and finally find their way to the Bay of Bengal and the Indian 
Ocean. 

Despite their many similarities, all the rivers big or small are unique. 
They have a personality of their own, as distinctive as the landscape 
through which they flow. But you can only see these special qualities 
if you go closer and watch the fascinating life in the flowing water and 
study the inter-relation of plants and animals that dwell in it. Just a passing 
glance will not reveal the deep secrets. You will then have the satisfaction 
of understanding the marvels of the living world of nature and the thrill 
of discovering a new life. 

Before we trace the course, the history and resources of the rivers 
of India, I would like to give you a basic and fundamental introduction 
to what is a river, what are its uses, and explain how it is geographically 
divided into three parts-the source of a river, the channel of a river and 
the mouth of a river. It will help you to appreciate and understand the 
later chapters of the book as we go along. 

A river is a large body of water that flows over land in a long channel. 
Most of the rivers begin from the mountains or even hills. The source 


6 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


of a river could be varied-a melting glacier or a snowfield, an overflowing 
lake, or even tiny springs merging into one. As the river flows downwards 
in its channel, it receives more water from streams and other small rivers 
and also rainfall. The end of the river is the mouth, where the water empties 
into a larger river, a lake or an ocean. But often, heavy rainfall or the 
rapid melting of the snow in the mountains, causes the river to overflow. 
This flooding may wash away large amounts of fertile farmland, destroy 
buildings and injure or kill people and animals. 

Rivers all over the world vary greatly in size and length. Some are 
so small that they dry up during the hot summer months. The longest river 
in the world is the River Nile in Africa, flowing a length of 6,671 kms 
(4,145 miles). The second longest river is the River Amazon in South 
America, measuring 6,437 kms (4.000 miles). But it is so vast that it 
carries more water than any other river- more than the Nile, Mississippi 
and Yangste in China, all put together. 

Rivers are of great help to humanity in many different ways. Through 
the centuries they have been a source of transportation. Explorers and 
travellers built settlements as they moved along. Slowly trade flourished 
along its banks. The early settlers of North and South America used rivers 
to move inland and capture the lands from the native Red Indians. The 
earliest civilizations-the Aryan, Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian, were 
established on the banks of rivers. India too, has a history of many invasions 
from the earliest times known. The terrestrial route these invaders took 
was not far from Taxila, the "Door of India". They moved forward in the 
direction of the River Indus from the Oxus River, which is the present 
northern border of Afghanistan. The earliest to cross the River Indus were 
the Aryans, who invaded in the second millennium B.C. (1500 B.C.). Much 
later came the Cyrus and Darius Persians. Alexander's Greek and their 
successors (326 B.C.), the Scythians (1st century A.D.), the Parthians, 
Tokharians, Huns, Turks, Arabs and Mongolians. It was the same place 
where the Chinese pilgrim Huan-Tsang, in the 7th century A.D. crossed 
the river by boat to call on the Emperor Harshavardhana. He later wrote 
a chronicle on the reign of this great King. 

Excavations in the Punjab at Harappa (2500 B.C.) on the Sutlej river, 


WHAT IS A RIVER? 


7 


have revealed an advanced civilization-the Indus valley civilization. The 
earliest civilization in India was found on the river Indus which flows across 
north-west India and through Pakistan. By the year 2,000 B.C. it became 
the great Indus valley civililzation. The valley was rich in irrigation, the 
towns were well-planned and had a good sewage system and the people 
had a language of their own. 

But around the year 1500 B.C., India was invaded by the Aryans. 
They were warriors who had conquered a large portion of Europe as well 
as Iran and had finally reached India. The Aryans were the discoverers 
of the very important metal, iron and they brought in a new language, 
Sanskrit, which has co-relation to many European languages. The Aryans 
also introduced a new religion which was later called Hinduism. They 
moved south till they reached the river Ganga. They cleared the forests 
and made settlements along the river, working on the fertile soil and grew 
rice and raised cattle. And the Ganga plains soon came to be known as 
the land of the Aryans. Thus, rivers have become a focal point in forming 
the history of the world. 

Rivers are also valuable to agriculture because their valleys and plains 
provide fertile land to grow crops. For example, the rich basin of the 
Ganga and the Nile yield ample crop and this in turn, also leads to 
employment and prosperity. For those farmers who live in the dry regions, 
irrigating their land was not a big problem. Irrigation ditches and water 
canals carry water from the river to their farmlands. A large part of India 
is agriculture land and the livelihood of millions of people, employed 
in agriculture or in trades and industries related to it, depend on the rivers. 

Rivers also serve as an important source of energy. The rapid force 
of the flowing water near waterfalls and other steep places is used to 
run machines and even generate electricity. The Bhakra Nangal Hydro¬ 
electric Project generates and distributes electricity to many regions of 
northern India. Today, hydro-electric water turbine plants produce about 
one fourth of the world's electric power. Water wheels and water turbines 
change the force of the flowing water into energy. Flour mills, machinery 
and textile mills are built near the steep rivers and operated by water 
power. 



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WHAT IS A RIVER? 


9 


The source of a river is mainly a combination of rainfall, lakes, springs 
and melting ice and snow. The streams that flow from a river's source 
are known as headwaters. The highest elevation of a river is its headwaters. 
The headwaters flow into narrow channels called rills. As they travel 
downwards, they join together to form wider and deeper channels. These 
are the brooks, which further downhill, combine to form streams, and 
the streams join to form rivers. All the rills, brooks, streams carrying 
water to the river are called tributaries. The river with its tributaries is 
known as a river system. And some river systems have many small rivers 
that eventually flow into one large river. 


Rivers begin from the mountains where melting glaciers or a snowfield forms the source of the 
water, (facing page) 

River channel consists of land on either side of the river, as also beneath the flowing water. The 
bottom of the channel is known as a river bed and the edges are called river banks. This is the 
Channel of river Ravi flowing through Himachal Pradesh, (below) (Photo NHPC) 








10 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The last stage of a river before it reaches the sea is known as the 
river's mouth. This is Ganga at Calcutta where it empties out in 
the Bay of Bengal. 




WHAT IS A RIVER? 


11 


Thus, rainfall reaches the largest river by way of rills, brooks, streams 
and small rivers. But some of it also soaks into the ground and accumulates 
as 'ground water'. And some of this ground water seeps into the river 
system, thereby keeping the river water flowing even in dry seasons. 



However, in some dry regions, 
there is not sufficient over-land 
flow or even ground water to 
keep the rivers flowing the year 
round. These rivers dry up from 
time to time and are called 
intermittent rivers. 

The waters of the river system 
form the drainage 'net' of that 
land area. This region which is 
drained by the river is called 
system drainage basin. The 
drainage basin of the River 
Amazon in South America 
covers an area of about 
7,000,000 sq kms (2,700,000 
sq miles). 

The Channel of a River 

And now we will understand in 
depth what is a river channel. It 
consists of land on either side 
of the river, as also beneath the 
flowing water. The bottom of the 
channel is known as a river bed 
and the edges are called river 
banks. The slope of the channel 
is usually steep at the source of 
the river and flat near its mouth. 
The flow of the water in most 
rivers therefore, is rapid in its 







12 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


upper course. When a river crosses a layer of strong resistant rocks, it 
causes a waterfall or rapids. Further downstream, the rocks are softer 
and get eroded by the gushing flow of water, thereby causing a deep drop 
in the water channel. The Niagara Falls on the 36 mile long Niagara River, 
connecting Lake Eeri and Lake Ontario in North America, the Victoria 
Falls on the river Zambezi in Central Africa and the Gersoppa Falls in 
Karnataka, India, are some such examples. Rapids are a result of the 
tumbling of large boulders or rocks ledges in the river channel. The current 
of fast flowing river sometimes cuts a canyon, and the river has high walls 
worn into its beds. The spectacular Grand Canyon in North America on 
the River Colorado which flows down from the Rocky Mountains is a 
majestic wonder of nature. 

As the river flows through its upper course it may also cut valleys 
through the land. This is caused by the land eroding due to the force of 
the swift flow of water and a deep V-shaped valley rises from the river 
bank. 

Next comes the middle or lower course of the river. Here the area 
on both sides of the river banks is flat. This area is known as the flood 
plain. During floods, the river water spreads out all over these plains. 
These floods may cause natural levees. They are a build-up of sediment 
(soil and rock) that raises the river. Next to these natural levees, marshes 
and back swamps are formed. 

The Mouth of a River 

The last stage of a river before it reaches the sea or the lake, is 
known as the river’s mouth. The slowing process of the river at this stage 
creates a body of land called a 'delta'. It begins to build up at the river's 

mouth and stretches out like a web right across to the sea or the lake 
where the river empties out. Deltas are formed because the river deposits 
the products of erosion and rocky decay as it moves along. When this 
visible dump is rapidly deposited, it forms a delta. The rivers Mississippi 
and the Nile have very large deltas. 

Now you know the basic information about a river-its source, its 
formation, its uses, its course and a lot more. Flowing smoothly and 
rapidly along, the river plays a very important role in the lives of the people 


WHAT IS A RIVER? 


13 


and their land. It is a blend and harmony of nature and life, reflectiing 
strength, tolerance, endurance, anger, calm, spreading a philosophy of its 
own as it flows through the land. 

The following hymn from Rabindranath Tagore's Gitanjali, in my eyes, 
reflect the pulse of the river in all its glory. 

n Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high 
Where knowledge is free; 

Where the world has not been broken up into fragments 
by narrow domestic walls; 

Where the words come out from the depth of truth; 

Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards 
perfection; 

Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into 
the dreary desert sand of dead habit; 

Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever widening 
thought and action- 

Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country 
awake." 


2 

Himalayas-Abode of the Gods 


I ndia is a vast country abounding in rivers and mountains, deserts 
and fertile land, lakes and oceans, marshy swamps and parched open 
spaces, fruit laden meadows and wheat and rice crops swaying in the 
breeze. Its people are as different and varied, yet reflecting a culture that 
is strong and vibrant-bonding the country that is so proud of her heritage. 

I have chosen as my subjects one of the most significant aspects 
of our country-the rivers of India, which are the main arteries, throbbing 
with life and giving hope and sustenance to its people. My effort will 
be to give you in simple details, the richness and importance of their 
presence, as we trace their source and course, the historical, geographical 
and mythological tales related to them, the pilgrim places along its course, 
the growth of towns and cities and the industries related with them, as 
well as reflecting on the harm mankind is doing from keeping the 
environment free from global pollution. I do hope the book will be an 
experience and an adventure for you, prodding you to explore further and 
seek more from this fascinating world that we live in. 

So we start from the very beginning-and that would mean, the very 
source of the rivers of India. We have divided the Indian rivers into two 
parts-the rivers of the north, whose main source lies in the Himalayas, 
and the rivers of the south, which find their source in the Vindhya ranges 
of Central India. 

The Himalayas have not only been a source of strength, wealth and 
fertility of the land, but have from the dawn of history, influenced, in 
countless ways, India's thinking, her life and her heritage. 


HIMALAYAS-ABODE OF THE GODS 


15 


The Himalayas, Transhimalayas and Karakorum ranges were formed 
30 million years ago when the northward moving Indian subcontinent 
collided with the southern edge of Euroasia. As a result, there was an 
upthrust and over thousands of years, the whole range of mountains slowly 
and gradually went through different phases of formation. 

Mount Kailas, a perpetually snow-clad mountain peak at a height 
of 6,718 meters (22,028 feet) above sea level, is the main source of 
all the major rivers of the Himalayan and Transhimalayan regions, the 
Yarlung tsangpo (Brahmaputra) in the east, the Indus in the north, the Sutlej 
in the west, the Ganga in the southwest and the Karnali in the south. Mount 
Kailas has a circumference of about 51.5 kms.( 32 miles )and it rises 
2,133 meters(7000 feet) high above the surrounding Tibetan plateau in 
western Tibet. Kailas also overlooks the lake Manasa or Manasarovar, 
which has a circumference of 90 kms. (56 miles) forming an oval of 518 
sq. kms (200 square miles). A very inaccessible and challenging pilgrim 
spot, Manasarovar lake is 92 meters (300 feet) deep and there are 80 
gompas or Buddhist monasteries around the lake. 

From a distance, the Manasarovar looks majestically calm and 
dignified and yet sparkling. An interesting speciality noticed about the 
lake is the fact that even when there are high waves near the shore of 
the lake, "its middle current remains calm and clear, like a mirror reflecting 
the silvery dome of Kailas." The lake is situated 29 kms.( 18 miles) south 
from the base of Mount Kailas. The whole region is called the Manas- 
KhandortheKailas-KhandintheHindureligiousbooks.lt covers an 
area of 322 kms.(200 miles) east-west and 161 kms.(100 miles) south 
and has very few inhabitants. 

According to the Tibetan scriptures Kangri Karchhoke , the Kailas 
forms the centre of the Universe and it has four footprints of the Buddha 
on its four sides. Devout Hindu and Buddhist pilgrims who tediously 
traverse difficult paths, perform a pradakshina or circumbulation of the 
mountain and it takes them three to four days to do so! 

Along the route there are five very famous gompas or monasteries. 
Once every 12 years a big fair is held at the base of the Kailas, visited 
by thousands of pilgrims. 


16 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


It is around the lake Manasa that you will find the source of the 
rivers Indus, Sutlej and the Karnali. According to the mythological legends, 
the Ganga also took its birth from the Manasa. Manasa means the 'mind' 
and the lake was so called because it reflects the mind of Brahma, the 
creator of the world. 

At a distance of about 5 to 8 kms.( three to five miles) from Manasa, 
there is another lake called the Rakshasa-tala. It is associated with King 
Ravana's penance performed here to propitiate Sita. The lake is 124 kms. 
( 77 miles ) in circumference and 45 meters (150 feet ) in depth. It 
is believed that there is an underground channel through which waters 
from lake Manasa flow into this lake. 

Through the centuries there have been references of Lake Manasa 
by travellers, saints, religious sects, in religious writings and in 
geographical texts. Tulsidasa, the saint-poet of India, was very fascinated 
by the beauty of the Lake Manasa. He therefore gave his poetic story 
of Rama the name Ramacharitramanasa wherein he has compared the 
life of Rama to that of the Lake Manasa and its readers, to the swans 
on its waters. 

In the mythological epic Mahabharata written by Vyasa, there is 
a mention of two of the Pandava brothers, Arjuna and Bhima visiting 
Lake Manasa with Lord Krishna. 

In the Buddhist texts written in Pali and Sanskrit, the Lake Manasa 
is called Anavatapta, which means 'without heat and trouble'. In the Jain 
religious text, the lake is called Asthapada or 'that having eight flanks', 
or Padmahrada or the lotus lake. It is also believed that the first of the 
Jains 24 Tirthankaras or gurus, Adinath Rishbha Deo, attained his Nirvana 
or salvation, here. 

There is also a reference of the lake Manasa during the reign of 
King Ashoka. In 269 B.C. he sent the then king of Kumaon to western 
Tibet to subdue it. It was then annexed to his empire. 

In the 7th and 8th centuries, several Chinese travellers came to India 
across this region to study at the renowned Nalanda University of the 
time and also to visit the Buddhist pilgrim centres of India. Edrisi, an 


HIMALAYAS-ABODE OF THE GODS 


17 


Arab geographer of the 12th century, has referred to the lake Manasa in 
his writings. Also, Father Desideri and Father Freyre of the Roman Catholic 
faith were the first European missionaries to visit the lake and describe 
it in their memoirs. 

Emperor Akbar also, sent a team to explore the source of the Ganga. 
They succeeded in preparing a map of this area showing the Brahmaputra 
flowing from the Manasa lake and the Sarayu from the Rakshasa Tala. 

According to Prof. Roerich, the renowned Russian painter, who made 
India his home, " the Himalayas is a place surcharged with spiritual 
vibration." Swami Paravananda who visited this area regularly every year 
since 1928, has said,"Kailas and Manasarovar are the holiest of the holy 
tirthas (pilgrims places) in the Himalayas. In the surroundings of the holy 
Kailas and Manasarovar, even the most endearing man, to whatsoever 
religion he may belong, whether to Hinduism or Buddhism, Christianity 
or Islam, whether to atheism or agnosticism, becomes concentrated and 
irresistibly, unknowingly, unconsciously, drawn-as if propelled by someone 
behind-to the divine presence that is hidden behind this vast universe." 

About five kms. (3 miles) up in the hills near Kedarnath is a great 
tank formerly knows as Choravadi Tala, now called "Gandhi Sarovar" as 
Gandhiji's ashes were immersed here in 1948. The Mandakini river takes 
its origin here from this tank. 

Thus we see that many of the prominent rivers of the north have 
their source in the Himalayas. The Himalayas have exercised a 
predominant influence on the life and culture of India. They have not only 
shaped her history to a great extent, but also left a deep imprint on the 
literature and arts, legends and religious beliefs of its people. The sacred 
rivers, the Ganga and the Jamuna around which cluster myths, stories and 
songs, as well as the Indus, Brahmaputra, Godavari, Narmada and Kaveri, 
have contributed to India's prosperity. In the next chapter we will trace 
the course of the major rivers that flow down from the Himalayas. I hope 
you do not get caught in the maze. 


3 


The Vast Expanse Across the Horizon 


T he Himalayas extend across central Asia from the north-east border 
of Afghanistan to the north-western border of Myanmar, covering 
a length of nearly 3,220 kms.( 2,000 miles ). They form a natural barrier 
between the plateau of Tibet and the plains of northern India. There are 
three pre-dominant parallel ranges, namely, the Great Himalayas, the lesser 
Himalayas or the Trans-Himalayas and the Karakorum ranges. 

In the Great Himalayas are some of the world's highest mountains, 
which include Mount Everest 8,848 meters (29,028 feet), the world's 
highest peak and the Kanchenjunga 8,598 meters (28,208 feet), the world's 
third highest mountain. The Makelu 8,480 meters (27,824 feet), Dhaulagiri 
8,144 meters (26,810 feet), Nanga Parbat 8,096 meters (26,650 feet), 
Annapurna One 8,051 meters (26,504 feet), Gosainathan 7,986 meters 
(26,291 feet) and Nanda Devi 7,791 meters (25,654 feet) are some of 
the other noted peaks. The peaks in the lesser Himalayan region vary from 
2,140 to 4,560 meters (7,000 feet to 15,000 feet). The Shiwalik range 
610 to 1525 meters (2,000 to 5,000 feet) is part of the outer Himalayas. 
K2 or Mount Godwin Austin 8,610 meters (28,250 feet), is the second 
highest peak in the world and is part of the Karakorum range in north¬ 
eastern Kashmir. 

Let us now scan the Himalayas and briefly place the ranges and the 
course of the rivers that flow through them. Right on top are the tires 
of the Pir- Panjal range, forming the western end of the Himalayas. Below 
them is the exhaustive valley of Kashmir which is drained by the Jhelum 
river. The basin of the valley covers a length of 137 kms. (85 miles) and 
is 56 kms. (35 miles) wide. A large part of the valley's trade is carried 


THE VAST EXPANSE ACROSS THE HORIZON 


19 


out on the Jhelum, which is fed by several streams. The beautiful Kashmir 
valley with its towering peaks, magnificent lakes, springs and water¬ 
falls, lush meadows and breath-taking gardens, is a feast for the tourists 
eye. 

Towards the east of Jammu and Kashmir state, situated in Ladakh 
is the broad valley of the Upper Indus river. Teh is the capital city of 
Ladakh at a height of 3,350 meters (11,000 feet) above sea level. It is 
about 322 kms. (200 miles) from Srinagar. The river Indus flows east 
of Leh and passes by the famous Buddhist monastery, Hemi's Gompa. 

The River Indus and its tributary, the Gilgit, divide the state of Jammu 
and Kashmir into two. To the north of the Indus is the trails - Himalayan 
portion and to its south is the Karakorum range, with many high peaks 
and large glaciers. And south of the Karakorum range are the Kailas and 
Ladakh ranges. The River Shy ok and its tributary Nubra as well as the 
North Shigar river from the Karakorum glaciers finally join the Indus. 
The River Gilgit and its tributary, the Hunza, drain the north-western part 
of Jammu and Kashmir. 

River Jhelum divides the city of Srinagar into two parts and a number 
of bridges connect the two. The famous Dal lake is also situated in 
Srinagar. The large number of boats plying on the lake and the River Jhelum 
is a mode of transport as well as trade. They meet the needs of the local 
population as well as serve as houseboats or shikar as for the tourists. 
Close to Srinagar 40 kms. (25 miles ) is Gulmarg or the 'meadow of 
flowers' at an altitude of 2,590 meters (8,500 feet), a very beautiful hill- 
station of India. 

82 kms. (51 miles) north-east of Srinagar is Sona Marg or the 'golden 
meadows', resplendent with wild scenic beauty. The Sindh river drains 
this region. 

96 kms. (59 miles) south-east of Srinagar is the hill-resort of 
Pahalgaon at an altitude of 2,135 meters (7,000 feet). It is located within 
the side valley of the Lidder river. The route to the Amarnath shrine also 
lies along the banks of the Lidder. 

The Pir Panjal is the most prominent range of the Great Himalayas. 


20 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The rivers Jhelum and Chenab pierce through the range in the form of 
gorges. 

River Tawi is a tributary of the Chenab. It is also known as Surya 
Putri or the daughter of the sun God. The Nilamata-puranas describes 
her as holy and the one which pleases the sun. The Tawi flows past the 
city of Jammu and many people take a holy dip in its waters. 

The river Beas takes its rise from the glaciers of the south face of 
Pir Panjal. It flows east, past Mandi, into the Punjab. 

To the south of the Pir Panjal range are the foothills of the Shiwalik. 
This region acts as a buffer between the valley of Kashmir and the hot 
plains of the Punjab. Jammu is an important town in this region, situated 
at the junction of the plains and the hills. The road from Punjab to Kashmir 
passes through Jammu. 

Further south-east, the Himalayan region in the Punjab has four main 
valleys-the Kangra, Kulu, Lahaul and Spiti. The Lahaul and Spiti valleys 
beyond the Rohtang Pass are surrounded by mountains with heights ranging 
from 4,570 metre to 6,100 metre (15,000 feet to 20,000 feet). The Lahaul 
is drained by the Chandra and Bhaga rivers, which join just below the town 
of Keylong to form the Chenab. The river Spiti also passes via Lahaul 
and flows into the Sutlej. 

The Kangra valley is connected with the plains on one side and the 
Kulu valley on the other. All along its southern side flows the rivers Beas, 
winding its way with tumultuous currents. Dharamsala is a well-known 
hill-station of this area. 

The Kulu valley begins at the end of the gorge and forms the second 
part of the Kangra valley. The Beas flows through this valley amidst 
cultivated terraces. 

The portion of the Himalayas which spreads from Dehradun to 
Nainital includes the region which is known as Uttarakhand or Kedarkhand. 
The Tehri-Garhwal and the Pauri-Garhwal are part of Uttarakhand. The 
rivers Yamuna and Bhagirathi as well as their tributaries rise in this region. 
The four famous and sacred temples of Yamunotri, Gangotri, Kedarnath 
and Badrinath are situated in the Uttarakhand. The Great Himalayan range 


THE VAST EXPANSE ACROSS THE HORIZON 


21 



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extreme west region, rise the rivers Yamuna and the Tons. Further east 
is the basin of the Gangotri glacier. The Bhagirathi river gushes out of 


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THE SMALLER RIVERS-A SOURCE OF LIVELIHOOD 


23 


the snout of the Gangotri, which is joined by the Jhanavi, 25 kms. further 
downstream. The Kedarnath peak (6,940 meters) is to the south and the 
Badrinath (7,138 meters) to the south-east. The river Mandakini rises 
from the Choirabari glacier right below the Kedarnath peak. From the 
glaciers of the eastern slopes rises the river Alaknanda. The valley of 
River Sarda is the natural boundary of this region, ending on the Nepal 
border. Some of the well-developed towns of this region are Dehradun, 
Nainital, Ranikhet and Almora. 

Nepal, an independent state, forms the eastern end of the central 
Himalayas. A peculiar phenomenon of this region is that the slopes facing 
India are very steep. These high mountain intercept the moisture-laden 

The source of a river could be a lake. Naini Lake is in the lapof the Central Himalayas in the 
Kumaon region. It is surrounded by snow-capped peaks on all sides, (opposite page) 

River Beas with towering peaks, lush meadows and gushing water, (below) 



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24 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


winds which blow from the sea in the south, thereby facilitating the 
northern plains to receive the monsoon rains. The melting snow as well 
as the falling rain feed the rivers which flow from the Himalayas. Most 
of the rivers that run from this region are gushing torrents in the mountains 
but become slow and calm on the plains. Some of the important rivers 
that rise in this region are the Ghaghra, Gandaki,- Kali and Kosi. The longest 
tributary of the Ghaghra is the river Karnali which rises in the springs 
of Mapche Chungo in Tibet, near the Mansarovar. The Rapti is another 
important tributary of the Ghaghra. 

Another large river that descends from a great height in the eastern¬ 
most Himalayan region, is the Tsang Po which later gets a change in name 
when it enters India and is then called the Brahmaputra. It rises in the 
neighbourhood of the Mansa Lake on the Tibetan plateau beyond the 
Himalayas. 

The Tsang Po flows eastwards, for over 1,288 kms.(800 miles) and 
suddenly turns south-west and enters India in the then NEFA region 
(North East Frontier Agency). The Tista river flowing from Sikkim is a 
tributary of the Brahmaputra. At some distance from Kalimpong, it flows 
down to join the great Brahmaputra in Bangladesh. 

As we go further east, lying on the southern slopes of Eastern 
Himalayas, Bhutan overlooks the plains of India. To its north-west is Tibet 
and to its north-east is Sikkim. The rivers of Bhutan are more or less 
mountain torrents and most of them form the tributaries of the 
Brahmaputra. The largest of them is the river Manasa. The river Torsa 
flows from the Chumbi valley between Bhutan and Sikkim. The river 
Wangchu drains the Ha and Paro valleys and the river Manchu which flows 
through the Punakh valley, reaches the plains where it attains the name 
ofSankosh. 

There is a confluence of the Ranjit and Rongneya rivers at a distance 
of 16 kms.(10 miles) from Darjeeling and the joint waters flow into the 
Tista river. 

In the eastern section, the Brahmaputra flows through Assam for 
a distance of624 kms.(450 miles). At Dibrugarh, its bed flanks to a breadth 


THE VAST EXPANSE ACROSS THE HORIZON 


25 


of 8 kms.(5 miles) and even more. Guwahati and Dhubri are some of the 
important towns on its banks. Near Dhubri, the Brahmaputra flows out 
of Assam, by-passing the Garo hills and enters Bangladesh, where north¬ 
east of Dacca, it joins the river Meghna. And the combined waters of 
these rivers then join the river Padma, a tributary of the Ganga. 

This chapter will especially help you and give you a sense of 
familiarity when we go into further details of the rivers of the north. In 
the next chapter, we begin with the most sacred of Indian rivers, the Ganga. 

"The Ganga, above all other rivers, is the river of India, 
which has held India's heart captive and drawn uncounted 
millions to her banks since the dawn of history. The story 
of the Ganga, from her source to the sea, from old times 
to the new, is the story of India's civilization and culture, 
of the rise and fall of empires, of the great and proud cities, 
of the adventure of man, of the quest of the mind which 
has so occupied India's thinkers, of the richness and 
fulfillment of life as well as its denial and renunciation, of 
ups and downs, of growth and decay, of life and death." 

The Discovery of India -Jawaharlal Nehru 

Philosophical and deep lying thoughts about the great Ganga, from 
a man in whose veins throbbed the pulse of India. The Ganga is the holy 
river par excellence of India. It is a personification of health and ab undance, 
dignity and prowess. It represents joy in this life and hope in the life 
to come. 

Ganga is the greatest waterway in India and one of the largest in 
the world. Its entire course is 2,510 kms. (1560 miles) from its source 
to the mouth. But it is not just its length that (pakes it one of the greatest 
rivers of the world. The Mississippi in North America, the Amazon in 
South America, the Nile in Egypt and the Yangste Kiang in China are much 
longer, some even two and a half times long. But what makes the Ganga 
an even greater river, is that, for more that 400 million Hindus in India 
and around the world it is the holiest and most venerated river on earth. 

The Bhagawata, a religious treatise of the Hindus, tells us how 


26 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


through a continuous process of physical as well as religious and spiritual 
discipline, a human being can evolve into a higher state of consciousness. 
Devotion and worship is an aid to spiritual sadhana and through pilgrimages 
to holy places and sacred shrines in all parts of the country, the pilgrim 
strengthens his devotion. And thus pilgrimages became a part of life in 
India. 


Pilgrimages helped to 
bring together people from 
different regions of India and 
through the spread of religious 
ideas it brought about a common 
brotherhood. It brought among 
the people a better under¬ 
standing and spirit of tolerance. 
A sense of inner harmony 
resulted from such awareness. 
From ancient times, religion and 
worship came to be associated 
with the love and beauty and 
serenity in nature. Spiritual 
sadhana attains progress where 
nature is tranquil, sublime and 
clear. The Indian centres of 
pilgrimages, were therefore 
mostly found in places of 
natural beauty on the hills and 
the plains. And through the years 
in different parts of India, the 
various mountains, rivers and 
their confluences were treated 
as sacred places for purpose of 
religious worship. 

Each year thousands of 
Hindu pilgrims visit the holy 



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THE VAST EXPANSE ACROSS THE HORIZON 


27 


Haridwar is a place where the Ganga leaves 
the Shiwalik hills and enters the plains. The 
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28 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


city of Benaras, Allahbad and Hardwar along the banks of the Ganga to 
bathe in the river and take back some holy water. All along the river banks 
there are temples and the ghats (stairways), lead down to the river. Each 
pilgrim comes down to the Ganga with a purpose. Some come to purify 
and cleanse themselves. The sick and the crippled ones come with the 
hope of getting cured by the pure waters of the Ganga. Many old and sick 
pilgrims come to die on the banks of the Ganga, for they believe that 
only from here will they go to paradise. Mr. B.N. Datar, a well known 
historian, in his book. The Himalayan Pilgrimage , has rightly said, "I 
was charmed with the natural scenery about Rishikesh, Lakshman Jhula, 
and bow my head in reverence to our ancestors for their sense of the 
beautiful Nature and for their foresight in investing beautiful 
manifestations of Nature with religious significance." 

The Ganga emerges from an ice cave at the foot of the Gangotri 
glacier, 3,892 meters (12,770 feet) up in Garhwal Himalayas. It flows 
under the name of Bhagirathi, which is the main arm. The other arm is 
the Alaknanda, which joins the Bhagirathi at Deoprayag. From here onwards 
she is known as the Ganga. Several tributary rivers including the Yamuna, 
Ramganga, Gomti, Ghaghra, Son and Sapt Kosi join the waters of the Ganga. 
The river Brahmaputra joins some of the branches at its mouth and together 
they form a large delta. The cave is known as the Gowmukh or the cow's 
mouth or Earth's mouth, for Gow also means the earth. The cave is shaped 
like the mouth of a cow, with a projected upper lip and behind it are two 
tall peaks, which look like two ears. Nothing in nature could be more 
ethereal than this divine spot and the tourists who dare to fathom the 
dangerous route to visit Gowmukh , refer to the mystical and spiritual 
feelings the place engenders. The cave is located 29 kms. (18 miles) above 
Gangotri. It is at this place, according to the Pur anas , that Ganga the 
daughter of King Himavat and the nymph Mena, was persuaded to come 
down to earth, by Bhagirath, a descendant of King Sagara. 

The story goes back to ancient times. It is the story of the birth 
of Ganga and has been immortalized by the poet Valmiki. King Sagara 
of the Ikshvaku dynasty ruled at Ayodhya. He had two queens named 
Keshani and Sumati. Neither of them had any child so the King performed 


THE VAST EXPANSE ACROSS THE HORIZON 


29 


severe austerities. Eventually, Queen Keshani gave birth to a son called 
Asmajas, whereas Queen Sumati gave birth to 60,000 sons. To declare 
his sovereignty over the neighbouring kingdoms, King Sagara decided to 
perform a grand ceremony, called th zAshwamedha Yajna. The ceremony 
involved his favourite horse, which would be let loose and allowed to 
go wherever he pleased. Anyone who tried to capture the sacrificial horse, 
would have to face the soldiers who guarded the horse and also fight them. 
And if the horse returned to the Kingdom unchallenged, it would prove 
that King Sagara was supreme. This challenge was a threat to Indra, that 
King of Heaven. He captured the horse and tied it behind the cavern by 
the sea where Sage Kapila was meditating. This region was in the 
underworld and is called the Patala. This place is known as the Ganga 
Sagar, where the Ganga joins the sea. 

The 60,000 sons of King Sagara who were following the horse, 
suddenly saw him enter the cave of Sage Kapila. They presumed that the 
Sage had captured the horse. They got angry but since he was a sage they 
did not kill him. However, they began cursing him and disturbed his 
meditation. The Sage was really annoyed and he opened his eyes. The 
moment his eyes fell on the 60,000 princes, he crushed them and his 
fiery anger turned them to ashes. 

King Sagara was deeply grieved at the loss of his 60,000 sons. His 
grandson Anshuman went to Sage Kapila and prayed and pleaded with him. 
Sage Kapila promised to grant him two wishes. Anshuman asked for the 
release of the horse and the 60,000 princes. The Sage gave back the horse. 
However he said the time was not right to release the princes. When the 
time came, Anshuman's grandson would pray to Brahma and he would 
release the holy river Ganga which he held in his Kamandalu and when 
she would flow over them, the 60,000 princes would come back to life 
again. 

King Sagara handed over his empire to his grandson and became a 
hermit. Anshuman ruled for many years. His son Dilip was the next ruler 
and he also tried to pray to Bhrahma but he was not appeased. Next to 
the throne came his son Bhagiratha. 

Bhagiratha renounced his throne and went high up in the Himalayas 


30 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


to do penance for his great-grandfather, King Sagara. He prayed with great 
intensity and devotion. He wanted to perform the shraadh for his ancestors 
but there was no water available. Sage Agasthya had drunk up all the waters 
of the ocean and there was drought in the country. 

In the meanwhile, there is another story which explains the reason 
of this drought. It goes to say that once a large number of demons were 
disturbing the hermits in their meditation. During the day they hid in the 
ocean but in the darkness of the night they would come out and harass 
the hermits. The hermits finally went to Sage Agastya, who had attained 
gastronomic powers through his meditation. He drunk up all the water 
of the ocean. He did it for a good cause but unfortunately it deprived 
the earth of all its waters and without water there can be no life. It was 
Bhagiratha's penance that brought an end to this drought. He prayed to 
the Brahma, the Creator, to end the drought and release his ancestors. 
Bhrahma asked him to pray to Vishnu, the preserver, to release the heavenly 
river Ganga to come down to earth. Vishnu answered Bhagiratha's prayers 
but in turn he asked him also to pray to Shiva the third God of the Hindu 
trinity to allow the gushing and forceful river to fall from heaven on his 
head. If the river came down directly it would split the earth in two. Shiva 
agreed to take the rushing force of Ganga in the matted locks of his hair, 
where it lost its force and followed king Bhagiratha as he walked eastward 
towards Ganga Sagar, blowing his conch-shell with joy. Shiva is also called 
Gangadhara or the 'upholder of the Ganga'. The river descended from 
Shiva's brow in several streams and they were known as the Sapta-Sindhava 
or the seven rivers. The Ganga is one of them. 

Ganga is considered the elder sister of Parvati or Uma, who is also 
the daughter to Himavat and Mena. According to the mythological story, 
she married king Santanu and bore a son, Bhishma. 

As Ganga began flowing down her course, there was yet another 
hurdle. Right in the middle of her path. Sage Jahnu sat meditating, 
and her rushing torrents washed away all his meagre belongings and 
it also broke his meditation. In a temper, he sucked up all the water. 
Once again Bhagirath prayed and appealed to the sage. Finally his anger 
mellowed and he set Ganga free. That is why Ganga is also known as the 


THE VAST EXPANSE ACROSS THE HORIZON 


31 


Jhanavi. She flowed along eastward till she reached the ocean where she 
went over the ashes of the 60,000 sons of King Sagara and they came 
back to life. 

According to the Agni Purana and the Padma Purana , the Ganga 
descended on earth on Ganga Dussera day and on this day, lakhs of pilgrims 
take a dip in the Ganga to purify their sins. The Agni Purana and Padma 
Purana state that for the Hindus it is considered very auspicious to die 
on the banks of the Ganga, or if not, after cremation of the body, they 
immerse the ashes of the dead, in the holy river. In this way they are 
released from the cycle of birth and rebirth and attain mukti. The Hindu 
religion says there are seven ways of worshipping the Ganga- by calling 
out her name '0 Ganga', by having her darshan; by touching her water; by 
worshipping and bathing; by standing in the waters of the river; and by 
carrying soil dug out of the river. 

The descent of the Ganga is seen in one of the exquisitely carved 
sculptures at the coastal site of Mahabalipuram near Madras. 

You now know the story of the birth of Ganga and a little about its 
religious significance to the Hindus. Now let us follow the course of 
the Ganga and its tributaries right from its birth at the Gowmukh till it 
plunges into the ocean at the Bay of Bengal. After receiving its drainage 
in the central Himalayas from the snow-covered peaks of Meru Parvat, 
Bhrigupanth, Shivaling and others, it flows through the vast and fertile, 
densely populated plains, moving from the north west to the south-east, 
where it empties at Ganga Sagar. The total length it covers is 2,505 Kms. 
(1,557 miles). The Alaknanda is the greater of its two main headstreams. 
It rises near the Tibetan border in the Garhwal district of Uttaranachal, 
about 48 kms. (30 miles) north of the Nanda Devi. The lesser of the two 
headstreams, the Bhagirathi, issues from an ice-cave at the foot of the 
Himalayan snow-bed near Gangotri in the Tehri Garhwal district. Just a 
little after the junction of the two headstreams, the united Ganga cuts 
through the ramparts of the Himalayas and emerges to the plains at 
Hardwar. 

The volume of the Ganga waters is mainly derived from the melting 
snows of the Himalayas and partly from the monsoon rainfalls, and, when 


32 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


compared to some of the other Indian rivers, the flow is more stable. 
Its course flows southerly through the dry plains of western Uttar Pradesh 
and south easterly past the city of Kanpur and reaches Allahabad. Here, 
from the right, it is joined by its largest tributary, the Yamuna. From there 
on, it meanders eastward past Benaras where the river Ghaghra joins it 
from the north and the Son from the south. As it flows through the heart 
of Bihar, it receives the Gandak and the Kosi from the north, both of 
which rises in Nepal. Towards the end of the Chhota Nagpur plateau in 
Bihar, the river swings around its corner and crosses into Bangladesh in 
a south-easterly direction. Here it branches out into channels that flow 
in innumerable directions and finally flows into the Bay of Bengal. 
Hooghly is the westernmost channel and the River Meghna is the 
easternmost. The Brahmaputra also merges with Ganga in Bangladesh and 
forms the river Padma. Further towards the sea is the vast tidal forest 
called the Sunderbans. And thus flows the Ganga into the ocean. 


J 


4 

The Sacred Ganga 


T he Ganga rises in the Garhwal region of the mighty Himalayas. It's 
most worthy source is the Jadh, the name of the rishi who had been 
provoked by the goddess Ganga. Some say that the Ganesha Ganga is its 
real source. It lies to the east of the Niti Pass. However, the most popular 
belief is that the real source of the Ganga is the Gowmukh , from where 
it flows out as the Bhagirathi. Its most important source is the Satopanth 
glacier, overlooking the very sacred Satopanth Lake. 

The Bhagirathi gushes out from the Gowmukh and tumbles downward 
along the sandy valley, swirling and fishing over the rocks and stones, 
through the birch of chir forests of Chirbasa. Dancing and hissing through 
in a north-westerly direction, it reaches Gangotri at a distance of 28 
kilometers. Since the river flows for a while in the northerly direction, 
it is known as the Gangotri ( uttari is northern). This is a famous pilgrim 
centre. In the temple of Gangamata at Gangotri, at a height of 3,142 meters 
(10,319 feet), resides the two images of Bhagirath and Ganga. The 
Brahmins have divided the bed of the river adjoining the temple, into three 
basins. This is the bathing place for the pilgrims. One of the basins is 
dedicated to Brahma, another to Vishnu and the third to Shiva. The 
pilgrimages Gangotri washes away sins and ensures eternal happiness. 
Saint Shankaracharya is said to have installed the idols of Bhagirathi and 
also those of Yamuna and Lakshmi. There is also a great slab of stone 
in the river bed, dedicated to Bhagirath whose sincere penance brought 
the river down to earth from heaven. 

At Gangotri, the Bhagirathi is joined by the Kedar-Ganga, which is 
also a glacial river. It flows down from the Kedarnath peaks and together 


34 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


they form a deeper and broader stream. Large blocks of rocks and earth 
frequently fall on its bed from the adjoining mountains. Just a kilometre 
downstream from Gangotri, the Bhagirathi falls into a small snout or a 
cave, called the Gauri-Kund (Pond of Gouri) and flows on again as a 
regular stream. 

At Bhairavi-Ghatti, 9!4 kms. (6 miles) below Gangotri, the Bhagirathi 
is joined by the Jada-Ganga, or the river Jahnavi. This river takes its rise 
in Tibet, north of Mana Pass. Compared to the silt-filled waters of the 
Bhagirathi, the Jahnavi brings down crystal clear water and at the point 
of confluence, the merging of the two rivers bearing different hues is 
a very fascinating and picturesque sight. 

As the fast moving current sweeps through deep gorges and ravines, 
the width of the Bhagirathi gets narrower and narrower, to almost 11 meters 
(36 feet) at some places. Near Jhala it broadens out again to almost 92 
meters (300 feet), for a distance of 3.2 kms (2 miles). Further down 
the river, the river bed again narrows down. And near Sukki, about 33 
kms. (27 miles) below Gangotri, the waters of the Bhagirathi rush down 
through the great Himalayan ranges with deafening noise, and fall from 
a height of 2,438 meters to 1,477 meters (8,000 feet to 4,850 feet) 
near Mallachatti and further down to 1,122 meters (3,688 feet) at Uttar- 
kashi, which is another pilgrim centre. 

As the Bhagirathi flows on a few kms. below Uttarkashi, near Nakhuri 
village, it is very near the river Yamuna, but an intervening mountain bars 
the meeting of the two rivers. 29 kms. (18 miles) further down at Dharasun, 
you begin to see terrace cultivation. And 45 kms. (28 miles) lower, on 
the suburbs of Tehri town, another tributary, the Bhilaganga joins the 
Bhagirathi. The river is now on its last lap through the middle Himalayas 
and 58 kms. (36 miles) further down, it is joined by the river Alakananda 
at Deoprayag, 670 kms. (2,200 feet). And here,56 kms. (35 miles) 
upstream from Rishikesh, the Bhagirathi and Alakananda unite to form 
r Ganga’ the name by which it is now known till it reaches the delta in 
the Bay of Bengal. The entire landscape along the course of the Bhagirathi 
is grand and breathtaking, with thick deodar forests on either sides of 
the river and its numerous brooks and waterfalls. 


THE SACRED GANGA 


35 


Five streams which gush out from the Alkapuri glaciers 13 kms. (8 
miles) north of Badrinath, form the Alakananda river. It rises from a small 
lake on the 5,482 meters (17,985 feet) high Mana Pass on the Tibetan 
border.About 91/2 kms.(6 miles) further down, near the Mana village, the 
Alakananda is joined by the river Saraswati. The place where the two rivers 
make a confluence is called Keshav-Prayag. This is the first of the sacred 
prayags or confluences. The Alakananda flows down its tumultuous course 
till it reaches the town of Badrinath, another pilgrim shrine. Here, another 
stream, the Rishi-Ganga, joins the Alakananda on the outskirts of the town. 
Right from Badrinath to Deoprayag the pilgrims route is along the river 
Alaknanda. From Badrinath, the Alaknanda goes southward through a 
narrow 20 kilometre long gorge which has steep quartzite walls on either 
side. You will come across caravans of sheep and goats, carrying salt and 
wool and also the mountain dwellers, who move down with their flock 
and belongings as the snow begins to cover the higher regions. The river 
Dhauli joins the Alaknanda at the end of the gorge. It flows down from 
a glacier on the 7,870 meters (25,806 feet) high Nanda Devi, the highest 
mountain of the central Himalayas. It is the sacred mountain of the goddess 
Devi, the Shakti or holy consort of Lord Shiva. At Lata, a small village 
in the Rishi gorge, you will find a small temple, dedicated to goddess 
Devi. 

The Alaknanda is joined by various streams as it traverses down - 
hill, and they form the prayags (confluences), namely the Vishnu Ganga 
near Joshinath, the Nandakini near Chamoli and the river Mandakini near 
Rudraprayag. The Mandakini rises from the Kedaranath mountains. 

From Deoprayag, the Ganga moves further south-west through the 
Himalayan and Shivalik ranges, for a distance of 97 kms. (60 miles) where 
it touches Rishikesh. The Lakshman-Jhoola is a beautiful spot near 
Rishikesh, where the Ganga flows along over rocks and stones. And 13 
kms.(14 miles) further down, it touches the plains at Hardwar. The Ganga 
has so far traversed a distance of 290 kms.(180 miles) from the source 
of the Bhagirathi. High up in the hills, above the town of Hardwar, is a 
little temple of MansaDevi, dedicated to Durga, wife of Shiva and daughter 
of king Himavat, the embodiment of Ganga. 


36 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


From Hardwar, the Ganga moves eastwards, a broad and easy flowing 
shiny river, passing through the towns of Saharanpur, Meerut, Aligarh and 
Farrukabad, where it receives the river Ramganga. Below Flardwar, there 
is a 64 kms.(40 miles) stretch when the river flows through Bhabar the 
porous region where the Shiwalik mountains deposit rocks and boulders. 
There are very few villages along this stretch of the Ganga. Two rounds 
of crops are harvested each year in this region. The wheat and gram are 
harvested at the end of March and rice, maize and millet are harvested 
towards the end of October. 

From the point where the river Ramganga joins the Ganga, it then 
becomes broad and rapid till it reaches Prayag or Allahabad. Here the 
Ganga is joined by the rivers Yamuna and the invisible, under-flowing river 
Saraswati. Hence this place is called the Triveni or the confluences of 
three streams. 

As you must have observed, all along the course of the Bhagirathi 
and the Alaknanda, there are so many pilgrim places. All the confluences 
of the rivers are considered sacred and the Hindus travel long distances, 
undergoing many hardships, but their faith is undeterred. A writer on the 
subject has observed "the Hindus pilgrimages to the eternal snows of the 
Himalayas, to the depths of forests, to the palm-clad seashores, to hidden 
sources of rivers or their mouths and confluences, are in fact, the natural 
outcome of his religions adventure or ambition and have ever served as 
an incentive to subjectively, meditation, and the growth of the country's 
underlying unity." 

The most significant and sacred of the shrines are in four directions 
of the country-Badrinath in the north, Rameshwaram in the south, 
Jagannath Puri in the east and Dwaraka in the west. They encompass within 
their bounds, the whole geographical expanse of this great ancient country. 
Lakhs of pilgrims go to the religious congregations of melas i.e. fairs- 
Prayag and Hardwar in Uttar Pradesh, Nasik in Maharashtra, LTjjain in 
Madhya Pradesh and others. 

From the time of the Vedas , the Ganga has been described with great 
devotion and reverence. In the epic Mahabharata , the Ganga is called 
the most sanctifying river in the world. 


THE SACRED GANGA 


37 


The religious significance of Ganga is therefore, greater than any 
other river on earth, being the great holy river of the Hindus. There are 
several teerthas or pilgrim places all over India but those along the Ganga 
are considered most holy. 

I would like to quote Jawaharlal Nehru from his book Discovery 
of India where he has aptly said. "Every place of pilgrimage contain a 
cross section of the people of India in all their great variety of custom, 
dress and language, and yet very conscious of their common features and 
the bonds that held them together and brought all of them to meet in one 
place." 

All the four principal pilgrimage centres of the Himalayas, namely 
Badrinath, Kedarnath, Jamnotri and Gangotri are quite close to each other. 
But due to the high peaks and large glaciated regions, the pilgrim route 
to these places circuits to over 966 kms. (600 miles) from Rishikesh. 

The journey to Gangotri and Jamnotri begins at Rishikesh. You pass 
through the towns ofNarendranagar 1,158 meters.(3,800 feet) Tehri 630 
meters (2,070 feet) and Dharasu. From Dharasu the road bifurcates into 
two directions, one leading to Gangotri and the other to Jamnotri. 

I have earlier in this chapter, told you about the temples and deities 
at Gangotri, the first pilgrim spot of the Bhagirathi after it flows out from 
the Gowmukh. Jamnotri is the other pilgrim centre which is at 
a height of 3,050 meters (10,000 feet). Though Jamnotri is not situated 
along the river Ganga, I would like to tell you about the significance of 
this place as a pilgrim centre for the pilgrims. Jamnotri, though on the 
banks of the Yamuna, is included as one of the four pilgrim centre for 
the pilgrims who take the circuitous route of the four main teerthas of 
the Himalayas, and hence we mention its significance in this chapter. 

The source of the Yamuna lies about 6 V 2 kms. (4 miles) above the 
town of Jamnotri from a glacial mountain Kalindi Parvat, which is situated 
behind the Bandarpoonch peak, at a height of 3,463 meters (10,050 feet). 
The currents of the river run northwards at Jamnotri and hence the name 
'Yamunotri' or the Yamuna turned northwards. The course of a river in 
this direction is considered doubly sacred. Jamnotri has a temple dedicated 


38 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


to Goddess Yamuna. The idol of Ganga is next to her, symbolizing the 
unity of worship. There are also a number of hot springs at Yamunotri. 

The northmost of all the five 'Kashis' of India is Uttarkashi, situated 
along the Bhagirathi at a height of 1,124 meters (3,688 feet). The two 
rivers Varana and Asi, merge into the Bhagirathi on the outskirts of 
Uttarkashi. The main temple here is the Vishwanath temple dedicated to 
Lord Shiva. In a hall in front of the temple is the trishul or holy trident 
of Shiva, symbolizing divine power. 

Badrinath, one of the four main pilgrim spots, is situated at a height 
of 3,110 meters (10,200 feet )above sea level in the Pauri Garhwal district 
of Uttar Pradesh. It lies in the cup of an open valley, along the river 
Alaknanda, flanked by the Narayan Parvat and the Nara Parvat on either 
side. The twin peaks form the Badrinath range and are always covered 
by snow. On the outskirts of the town, the river Rishi-Ganga joins the 
Alaknanda. The population of the town mainly consists of pandas or 
priests and a few traders. The Mahabharata says this region was very 
dear to the Lord. The place is also identified with the Badrika Ashram 
mentioned in the Puranas. 

The Naub temple is dedicated to Narayan. Standing 15 meters (50 
feet) high, it faces the east and from here you get a wonderful view of 
the gently flowing Alaknanda. The sanctum sanctorum of the temple has 
many idols, the main one being that of Maha-Vishnu, sitting in meditation 
in the siddhasana with his matted hair Bowing over his shoulders. On 
the left are the idols of the twin sages Nar and Narayan, and on his right 
is the idol of Kuber, Lord of wealth. Shankaracharya located Badrinath 
as one of the four maths , the others being Dwaraka on the west coast, 
Puri on the eastern coast and Sringeri in the far south. The main priest 
of the temple is called Ra wal. He belongs to the Namboodari community 
of Kerala to which Shankaracharya belonged. The practice of appointing 
a namboodari has been going on since centuries and even today, when 
a seat falls vacant, a celibate from the Namboodaris is installed. He has 
to remain a bachelor as long as he officiates at the temple. 

The temple is closed in the third week of November when the snowfall 
begins and is reopened by the middle of May. The priests and attendants 


THE SACKED GANGA 


39 


of the temple leave the shrine and go to Jyotimath during these months. 
According to popular belief, during the winter season, when the whole 
area lies covered with snow, sage Narada performs the worship of the 
Lord at Badrinath and the gods visit the temple everyday. Thus for 6 
months, the gods worship the Lord and for the remaining 6 months, the 
human beings worship the Lord. 

The Mahabharata tells the story of how Lord Vishnu assumed four 
forms, that of Nar, Narayan, Krishna and Hari. Nar and Narayan led an 
ascetic life and went to the Badrika Ashram where they performed eternal 
penance for the welfare of the world and for the good of all beings. It 
was here that Narada visited Badrinath and asked the two sages who they 
were and why were they carrying out such hard austerities. They in turn 
asked Narada to go to the Shwetadweepa or the white Island in the Ksheera 
Sagara or the Milky Ocean. There he would find the answer. Accordingly, 
Narada went to Ksheera Sagara and saw Lord Vishnu. He realized that 
Nara and Narayan were incarnations of Lord Vishnu. After taking his 
blessings, he returned to Badrika Ashram and spent many years there in 
the proximity of the two sages. The Mahabharata also tells us that in 
a later incarnation, Nar and Narayan became Arjuna and Krishna. There 
is a warm sulphur spring near Badrinath and the pilgrims take a holy dip 
in its waters. 

Pandukeshwar is another religion spot along the steep trek to 
Badrinath. Located at a height of 2,743 meters (9,000 feet), the region 
is covered with snow all the year round. It is called the Swargadwara 
or the Gateway to Heaven. During winter the idol of Utsava is taken from 
Badrinath and is worshipped at Pandukeshwar. On the outskirts of 
Pandukeshwar you will find the temple of Lord Raghunath. The rituals 
there, are performed in the Vaishnava style. 

The Hanumanchetti teertha 2,743 meters (9,000 feet) is located 
914 kms.(6 miles) away from Pandukeshwar. Legend says that after the 
war between Rama and Ravana, Hanuman settled down here. And it is here 
that he also mellowed the pride of Bhima, the second of the Pandavas. 

Further down at the confluence of the Alaknanda and Saraswati rivers 
in a village called Maana, it is said that Veda Vyasa had his ashram known 


40 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


as Keshava Prayag. It is here that he composed the Mahabharata and 
the Bhagwatci. Vyasa dictated the verses to Ganesha who is believed to 
have lived in*a cave nearby, known as 'Ganesha Gufa'. Here the river 
Saraswati is also called 'Jnanaswaroopini' or knowledge incarnate. The 
Saraswati flows with a great velocity and many waterfalls are formed in 
its course as it gushes down. 

The pilgrim centre of Kedarnath is 208 kms.(129 miles) up from 
Rishikesh. Upto Rudraprayag, the route to Kedarnath and Badrinath is the 
same. From there onwards, it bifurcates. The distance between Badrinath 
and Kedarnath as the crow flies is only 41 kms. (26 miles). Kedarnath, 
at a height of 3,585 metres(l 1,760 feet), is one of the four most famous 
shrines or Chatur dhamas of the Himalayas. The shrine is dedicated to 
Lord Shiva and is situated along the river Mandakini, against a backdrop 
of majestic snowy peaks. The Mandakini river rises high up in the glaciers 
and falls from a great height to a depth of over 395 meters(l,300 feet) 
alongside the town of Kedarnath. The shrine is located in an area that 
is above the level of vegetation. It is one of the twelve most sacred shrines 
dedicated to Shiva. In it is enshrined the Jyotir-linga. It is here that Bhima, 
the second of the Pandavas, encountered the buffalo form of Shiva. Behind 
the temple there is a path known as the Mahapanth or the great passage. 
It is said that the Pandavas ascended to heaven along this path. The head 
priest of the Shrine is drawn from the 'Lingayaf community of Karnataka. 
He resides at Okhimath, a town on the opposite bank of the Mandakini. 
There are 5 shrines at Kedarnath, known as the 'Panch-Kedar', namely 
the Kalpeshwar, Madhya-Maheshwar, Tunganath, Rudranath and Kedarnath 
proper. The pilgrims have to visit all five shrines to complete their 
pilgrimage. Shankaracharya spent his last days in Kedarnath. From the 
month of October to the end of April, the shrine is closed to the public, 
since the whole area is covered with snow. 

Jyotimath or Jyotirmath at a height of 1,859 kms. (6,100 feet) is 
another pilgrim centre along the river Alaknanda, where it falls as a deep 
gorge. In contrast to Badrinath, which has today become overcrowded 
and commercial, Joshimath as it is also known, is a beautiful village with 
quaint houses made of wood and stone. The most attractive features of 


THE SACRED GANGA 


41 


these houses are the delicately carved wooden doors, windows and 
balconies. You will come across such houses even in the most remote 
region right across the Nepalese border in the east to the river Sutlej. 
The sanctity of the place is attributed to it being the winter residence 
of Lord Badrinath. There is also another old temple of the Lord manifested 
in a man-lion form known as the Narasimha. Shankaracharya established 
his northernmost math at this place. The entire Alaknanda valley covered 
with Oak forests is full of wild life. The black-faced long-tailed monkeys 
are a common sight in this region. Near Karnaprayag at a height of 915 
kms. (2,805 feet), the Alaknanda is joined from the east by a tributary, 
Pindari, draining the south eastern side of the Nanda Devi. At Karnaprayag, 
the pilgrim route bifurcates. One turns off to the south-east, clamoring 
over many passes via Almora and further over the final range of the lower 
Himalayas to the popular hill-station Nainital. Here the main attraction 
is its beautiful lake which was formed by a landslide. 

The other pilgrim route goes along the river Alaknanda as it flows 
down in a south-westerly direction through oak and pine forests. Further 
along the course the second source river, Mandakini joins the Alaknanda 
and this confluence, is called the Rudraprayag. Its source is the 7,010 
meters (23,000 feet) high Kedarnath. 30 kms.(18 miles) further along 
the river, is the town of Srinagar, believed to be established by 
Shankaracharya. It has the well-known shrine of Kamaleshwara or Shiva. 
Legend says, that at this shrine, Shiva was given an offering of a 100 lotuses 
everyday. One day the flowers fell short by one and a devotee offered 
to sacrifice his own head instead. 

Another 32 kms.(20 miles) further down, the Alaknanda is joined 
by the Bhagirathi and this confluence is known as Deoprayag. In terms 
of sacredness, the Bhagirathi is equal to the river Alaknanda. It is 
considered to be the most sacred of Gangetic confluences next to the 
Triveni at Allahabad. It's source is on the west side of a granite mountain. 
From here onwards, the river is called Ganga. Here, at Deoprayag, an 
ancient temple is dedicated to Shri Raghunath or Rama, who is believed 
to have practised penance here. The priests of this temple belong to Andhra 
Pradesh and they have settled there since centuries. 


42 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The Ganga has now reached the foothills of the Himalayan range.71 
kms. ( 44 miles) below Deoprayag is the holy town of Rishikesh, which 
has a large number of temples, ashrams and ghats. There is a temple 
dedicated to Bharat and Laxman. Across the river is the suspended bridge, 
'Lakshman Jhoola', which leads to the 'SwargashranV the region where 
a large number of Sadhus or holy men sit in penance. On the left banks 
of the river is the 'Geeta Bhavan'. The verses of the Bhagavadagita are 
inscribed on its wall. Some scenes from the Mahabharata are also painted 
on the walls. 

22 Kms.( 14 miles) further down from Rishikesh is Hardwar. Hardwar 
has been a sacred place for over 3,000 years. Here the Ganga leaves the 
Shivalik hills and enters the plains. It is one of the seven great pilgrim 
centres of India. A very ancient town with a number of temples, lakhs 
of pilgrims come here every year. The Har-Ki-Pauri is the greatest and 
most famous of ghats here^ Every 12 years, the Kumbha-mela is held 
here, where pilgrims come in millions. In the evening, thousands of lamps 
are lit and placed on the waters of the Ganga. The mythological legend 
of this very famous fair is as follows-the sanctity of the Kumbha-mela 
is traced to the times of the amritamanthana or the churning of the Ocean 
of Milk. The devas or Gods were under the curse of a sage. They could 
only get their strength back if they drank the Amrita or cream from the 
Ocean of Milk. But some of the Asuras or demons also wanted a share 
of the nectar. When after a lot of churning of the ocean, the sage 
Dhanavantri appeared with the Kumbh or the pot of nectar, the gods and 
the demons, both fought over being its claimants. In the confusion that 
ensued, Vishnu took the form of mohini (damsel) and flew away with the 
pot. And while he flew, a few drops of the amrita (nectar) fell at four 
places and these four places became very sacred, Hardwar being on of 
the four spots. Since the nectar was carried in a kumbh or pot, the fair 
came to be know as. the Kumbh-mela . 

There is another legend attached to the festival. It goes to say that 
one deva or god took the form of a crow and grabbed the kumbh containing 
the nectar and flew away in the direction of heaven. He took 12 days to 
reach paradise and since the pot was heavy, he rested at four places. The 


THE SACRED GANGA 


43 


kumbh-mela occurs only at one place at a time and thus it takes place 
every three years. Pilgrims bathe in the sacred river and listen to religious 
discourses. There is a continuous recitation of scriptures, especially the 
Vedas. 

Besides Hardwar, the Kumbh-mela is held at three other places, 
namely, at Allahabad downstream of the Ganga, at Nasik on the river 
Godavari and at Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh, on the river Sipra. The Ardha 
Kumbh or half-kumbh is celebrated every six years and on this occasion, 
pilgrims bathe in the holy rivers Ganga, Yamuna, Kaveri, Narmada and 
Godavari. South of'Har ki Paudi' on the hill is the temple of Mansa Devi, 
another incarnation of Goddess Durga. Mansa which means Karma or 
wish, is said to fulfil the wishes of its devotees. 

After leaving Hardwar, the Ganga is a broad river flowing through 
the plains past Saharanpur, Meerut and Aligarh. At Farrukabad, it receives 
the Ramaganga. This is a major tributary of the Ganga in Uttar Pradesh. 
It has a 625 metres high dam in the Garhwal district of which when the 
waters are released, it irrigates 5.75 hectares of land. Its installed power 
capacity is 198 MW, supplying 200 cusecs of water to Delhi. 

We have so far traversed through the course of the Ganga from the 
mountains to the plains and also learnt about the numerous pilgrim spots 
and their significance to the Hindus through the mythological legends 
that are attached to them. The mighty Ganga is a vast subject and to make 
you understand her better, I have divided the detailing into various chapters. 

In the next chapter,after learning about Yamuna, we will meet again 
the Ganga in the plains on its remaining course of over one thousand miles. 
The flow of the river in the gangetic plains is gentle and so also is its 
slope. From the plains to the Bay of Bengal, there is a drop in its altitude 
of only 229 meters (750 feet). One third of the population of India lives 
in the three states through which the Ganga passes-Uttar Pradesh, Bihar 
and West Bengal. 


5 

Yamuna - The Black Goddess 


T he source of the Yamuna as mentioned in detail in the earlier chapter 
is near Yamunotri, in the Tehri Garhwal region, from the glacial 
mountain Kalindi Parvat, at a height of 3,463 meters (10,050 feet). It 
flows along a south-westerly direction and then turns eastwards, and cutting 
through the Shivalik hills, reaches the plains near Faizabad. The Yamuna 
is also known as Kalivadi and worshipped as a black goddess, riding a 
tortoise and carrying a water pot in her hand. It flows along the states 
of Punjab and Uttar Pradesh and has the same drainage pattern as that 
of the Ganga. The fertile belt between the two rivers with rich alluvial 
soil, is the Doab region, well-known for its sugarcane produce. Many 
great battles have been fought in this region in the past. Along its course 
of 1,287 kms. (800 miles), the Yamuna flows past the towns of Delhi, 
Brindavan, Mathura and Agra. 

Near Mathura-Brindavan, on the banks of the river Yamuna is the 
small town of Bateswar. Historically named Bhuteswar after Lord Shiva. 
The town has many temples dedicated to him. Legend goes to say that 
the ruler of Bhadarwar and Maharaja Nainapurush had made a deal that 
if either of them had a daughter and the other a son, the two would be 
married. But it so happened that both of them had a daughter each. The 
daughter of the Maharaja of Bhadarwar was declared as a son and she was 
raised in that manner. When the two children grew older, as decided, 
arrangements were made for their marriage. After the wedding, the 
marriage procession was returning to the grooms house, and they stopped 
for a while to rest on the banks of the river Yamuna. The daughter of the 
Maharaja of Bhadarwar impersonating as the bridegroom was really afraid 


YAMUNA-THE BLACK GODDESS 


45 


of the deception and out of shame, she jumped into the Yamuna. She 
received the blessings of Shiva and surfaced as Prince Vadni Singh. The 
Prince turned the direction of the river Yamuna from the east to the west 
and built 101 temples. He dedicated them to Lord Shiva, the Lord of the 
elements, namely agni (fire), vayu (Wind), akash (Ether), jal (water) 
and prithvi (earth). This place came to be known as Bhuteswar, a very 
popular pilgrim centre. The devotees make a wish and on it being fulfilled, 
they return to make an offering of a temple bell. 

How can one talk of the Yamuna without mentioning the festival 
of 'janmastami', the birth anniversary (on the eight day in the month of 
Shravana) of the much loved Lord Krishna! He is the most humane and 
endearing of the avatars. He is also known as Nula Megha Shareera 
or the body like a bluish cow. In the epic Mahabharata, Krishna plays 
a great role and the Bhagvata and the Vishnu Purana also give details 
of Krishna Avatar. 

Legend says that Vishnu incarnated himself as Krishna to destroy 
the evil king Kansa who had created hell and furore amongst his people. 
Kansa imprisoned his own father and usurped the throne. His atrocities 
were unbearable until finally Bhudevi, Goddess of the Earth, complained 
to Vishnu. He came down to earth as a human being, Krishna to destroy 
Kansa and bring peace on earth. 

Story goes to say that Kansa gave his dear sister Devaki in marriage 
to clansman Vasudeva. While he was escorting them home from the 
wedding he heard a voice from above proclaiming his doom at the hands 
of Devaki and Vasudeva's eight child. Enraged at hearing this, Kansa 
imprisoned his sister and brother-in-law in a dungeon. He killed all the 
seven children born to Devaki. But when the eight child was to be born, 
a heavenly voice told Vasudeva to take the baby boy born, across the river 
over the Brindavan, where he was to hand over the child to a cowherd 
Nanda. He would have to bring back his wife Yasoda's new-bom girl instead. 
Strangely enough there was a great storm at the birth of Krishna and the 
guards were also drugged in deep slumber. Vasudeva carried the baby 
Krishna in a basket and crossed the river Yamuna, which was in full spate. 
Krishna put out his little foot and touched the waters and they receded 


46 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF IND 



Yamuna, which also originates from the Himalayas, 
flows past the towns of Delhi, Brindavan, Mathura & 
Agra. The world famous Tajmahal, a monument in 
marble on the bank of Yamuna. 











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THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


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On the right bank of the river Ghagra or Sarayu, stands the old city of Ayodhya. 


to make way for Vasudeva. After safely handing over Krishna in Nanda's 
house he also brought the baby girl and put her in Devaki's arms. And 
when Kansa grabbed the girl to kill her, she flew through his fingers and 
revealed herself as Yogmaya or the spirit of Shakti. Kansa was so furious 
that he ordered his asuras to kill all newborns of the land. 

Krishna in the meanwhile, grew amongst rural surroundings, loved 
by one and all in Brindavan, especially Radha. He overcame various 
attempts on his life schemed by Kansa. He went to Mathura with his brother 
Balaram in response to a wrestling challenge from Kansa, where he finally 
killed the tyrant, and restored the throne to his imprisoned father 
Ugrasena. His life revolved around the affairs of his cousins, the Pandavas 
and the Kauravas. Eventually he took his people to Dwaraka on the coast 
of Gujarat, where he married two beautiful princesses, Rukmani and 
Satyabhama. Finally, he was caught up in the Mahabharata war where 
he revealed the sacred most of Hindu scriptures, the Bhagawad Geeta 
to Arjuna, thereby fulfilling the purpose of his incarnation, to destroy 
all evil from the land and bring peace. 













YAMUNA-THE BLACK GODDESS 


49 


Janmasthami is celebrated with great rejoicing all over the country 
but with much more splendour in Mathura, his birthplace. Devotees keep 
a fast on this day, which is broken only at midnight, the time of his birth. 
Temples and homes are cleaned and beautifully decorated and tableaux 
are taken out in procession, depicting the life and exploits of Krishna. 
Pots full of curds are hung in the streets and money tied around them 
and boys form a human pyramid to break them just like Krishna used to 
do. At midnight the idol of baby Krishna is placed in a small decorated 
cradle and arati is performed. The idol is ceremoniously bathed with curd, 
milk, honey, dry fruit and tulasi (Ocimum basilcum) leaves. This 
panchamrit is then given to the devotees as prasad or consecrated food 
after which they break their fast. The following day, passages are recited 
from the Gita and the Bhagawat Purana and hymns are sung in praise 
of Krishna. 

On Kartika-Purnima day, fairs are held all along the banks of the 
river, but the Bateswar fair is most popular. Pilgrims take a dip in the 
river and worship at the temple of the river goddess Yamuna. There is 
yet another legend regarding the birth of the Yamuna. Surya, the sun god 
married Sanjana (fame and glory), daughter of the celestial architect 
Vishwakarma. They had twins Yama and Yami, Yama became the Lord of 
Death and Yami, the spirit of the river goddess Yamuna. Since the Yamuna 
rises from the Kalindi (Sun) mountain, she is also called Kalindi. Her 
other name is Surya-ya or daughter of the Sun. The Yamuna flows on from 
Agra till it reaches Allahabad where it merges with the Ganga. 

Just about the confluence, the Yamuna is about less than a kilometre 
(half a mile) wide and is slow moving, limpid and blue in colour. Now 
we move ahead with our journey on the Ganga, civilizations along the 
river and its confluence with Yamuna and Saraswati at Prayag. 


6 

Civilization Along the Ganga 


T he evolution of India's civilization and culture is linked with the 
river Ganga. In fact, Buddhism and Hinduism, two of the greatest 
religions of the world, had its origin and also flourished in the Gangetic 
valley. The river has "silently worked through the ages, in an unceasing 
process, the regeneration of the soil of India, spreading life and strength 
everywhere. The Ganga, with its great tributaries, carries fertility and 
wealth, wherever it flows. There is hardly a river in the world which has 
contributed so much to material civilization and human thought as the 
Ganga." 

In the Mahabharata , Ganga is called the Tripatahga , or the three 
pathed one, since it flows into three regions. Dr. K.M. Pannikar, in his 
"Geographical Factors in Indian History", observes, "In view of the 
immense concentration of population and resources, the Gangetic valley 
has always dominated northern India. It is the dominant area from which 
not only political power but economic forces and cultural movements 
spread to 'Aryavarta', to the region north of the Vindhya ranges. The earliest 
imperial traditions were developed in Magadh and whenever a dynasty 
successfully united the Ganga valley, it inevitably spread its authority over 
the entire 'Aryavarta'. The Mauryans, the Kanwas, The Bharasivas, the 
Guptas, the Muslim Sultans of Delhi, the Moghuls-indeed the entire 
succession of north Indian imperial dynasties-based their power on the 
Gangetic valley. So strong was this tradition that the Ganga-Yamuna tor ana 
became the symbol of imperial sway. Every dynasty, even in middle India, 
once it established its authority in its homeland, dreamed of consolidating 
its rule by establishing itself in the area. The Satavahanas of Pratisthan, 
the kings of Avanti and even the Peshwas of Poona realized that their 


CIVILIZATION ALONG THE GANGA 


51 


imperial sway could be maintained only if they controlled the gangetic 
valley. The British advancing from the sea came to the same conclusion." 

From Hardwar, the vast Ganga begins its journey through the dry 

.1 

plains of Uttar Pradesh in a southerly direction and then turns south¬ 
easterly, passing through the city of Kanpur till it reaches Allahabad or 
Prayag, where the Ganga, Yamuna and the Saraswati merge. Tulsidas in 
his Ramacharitamanasa called this Sangam or the confluences of three 
rivers, and also Teerth Raj , the Lord of Holy waters. One of the most 
sacred places for Hindus throughout the Indian peninsula, Prayag has been 
mentioned in the travelogue written by the Chinese traveller Huen-Tsang, 
who came to India in the 7th century A.D. In it, he writes about a magnificent 
religious festival he witnessed, called the Kumbha mela ,about which you 
have already read in detail. It is said that Shankaracharya gave an organized 
form to the mela. 

Kalidasa in his Raghuvansha has written beautifully about the 
confluence. He says, "when the water of the Ganga and Yamuna mingle, 
it appears as though diamonds and sapphires were woven together in a 
string; as though a flock of white swans had suddenly run into another 
flock of black swans; as though a garland of white lotus buds were 
interspersed with blue lotuses; as though streaks of lightening had merged 
into a sheet of darkness; as though a clear blue sky were spotted with 
woolly clouds of autumn." 

Jawarharlal Nehru's passionate love for his country and more so for 
his birth-place Allahabad has been reflected in his last testament, thus- 
"I am proud of this noble heritage which was and still is ours, and I am 
aware that I too, like all of us, am a link in that uninterrupted chain which 
finds its origin in the dawn of history, in India's immemorial past. That 
chain I do not want to break, for I cherish it and find my inspiration in 
it. It is in testimony of this spend as a last homage to the cultural heritage 
of India that I request that a handful of my ashes be thrown in the Ganga 
at Allahabad so that they may be borne to the vast ocean which beats on 
the shores of India." 

Ganga Dusshera or the bathing festival is a very auspicious day for 
the Hindus. This bathing festival is celebrated throughout India in the Hindu 


52 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


calender month of'Jaistha' (May-June). On Sukkha-Dasami day, every 
Hindu has one wish-to take a holy dip in the sacred Ganga. On this day, 
due to the austere penance of king Bhagirath, invoking Bhrahma, Vishnu 
and Shiva, the Ganga had descended on earth. The Hindus firmly believe 
that their sins will be washed off by taking a holy dip in the Ganga on 
this day. The word Dussehra is derived from the Sanskrit phrase, Dasa- 
bidha-pap-hara or the destroyer of ten kinds of sins. Wherever the people 
cannot reach the Ganga, they take a dip in a pond or local river or sea 
and say Har har Gange. Fairs are held and 'Mata Ganga' is worshipped 
with great reverence. Prayag or Allahabad is therefore a very important 
religious centre. 

The most important festival in the Hindu calender month of'Magha' 
is the Makar Sankranti. This is the month when sun passes away through 
the winter solstice from the Tropic of Cancer to the Tropic of Capricorn, 
Makara. It is believed that this was earlier a festival that was celebrated 
in the colder regions, when people prayed for the warmth of the sun. The 
Aryans, when they migrated to India from the north-west, ,must have 
continued the worship. This festival is celebrated differently in different 
parts of India. 

In the coastal regions of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, 
it is celebrated as a harvest festival and is called Pongal Sankaranti. 
It is dedicated to Indra, God of Rain and is celebrated on the 13 th, 14th 
and 15th of January every year. 

Lohri is the harvest festival of the north, mainly celebrated in Punjab 
and Haryana. The day after Lohri is the Makara Sankaranti. In Uttar 
Pradesh, a very big fair is held at the confluence of the three rivers ar 
Allahabad. After a ritual bath in the river, the Hindus prepare a dish made 
of rice and dal (lentils) called khichri. It is also called the Magha Mela. 
The festival is also celebrated on the banks of the Ganga at Hardwar and 
Garh Mukteshwar in Uttar Pradesh and at Patna in Bihar. 

Jawaharlal Nehru in his Will and Testament has paid this fitting tribute 
to the Ganga- "I have been attached to the Ganga and the Yamuna rivers 
in Allahabad ever since my childhood and as I have grown older, this 
attachment has also grown. I have watched their varying moods as the 


CIVILIZATION ALONG THE GANGA 


53 


seasons changed, and have often thought of history and myth and tradition 
and song and story that have become attached to them through the long 
ages and become part of their flowing waters. The Ganga, especially, is 
the river of India, beloved of her people, round which are intertwined 
her racial defeats. She has become a symbol of India's age-long culture 
and civilization, ever-changing, ever-flowing, and yet ever the same Ganga. 
She reminds me of the snow-covered peaks and the deep valleys of the 
Himalayas, which I have loved so much, and of the rich and vast plain 
below, where my life and work have been cast." 

The other river which merges into the Ganga is the sub-terrain 
Saraswati. According to the legend, it also had its birth in the Himalayan 
region. After it enters Punjab, it flows by the famous historical site 
Kurukshetra in Karnal district in a south-westerly direction. From here 
it enters Rajasthan. Geologists say that due to some earth movement in 
the Himalayas, the main drainage of the Saraswati was taken away by the 
Yamuna, which usurped many of its tributaries. And by the time the 
Saraswati reached the desert of Rajasthan, it disappeared from view. The 
sacred tank at Pushkar near Ajmer is supposed to be situated on the bed 
of the Saraswati. The Luni river in Marwar district of Rajasthan as well 
as the Ghagar river in Punjab are believed to be tributaries of the original 
Saraswati. 

During the Vedic times the Aryans are supposed to have flourished 
on the banks of the Saraswati. The Vedas are said to have been first 
revealed on the banks of the Saraswati by a sect of priests known as 
'Saraswat Brahmins.' The Saraswati river though dried up, is believed to 
flow underground from the deserts of Rajasthan till it joins the Ganga 
and Yamuna at Triveni. This river is not mistaken for the one which flows 
as a stream and joins the Alaknanda, about which you have already read 
in the earlier chapters. The Saraswati is also identified with the Goddess 
of water. In the Rig Veda she is referred to as vach or speech and is the 
Goddess of eloquence. Later she becomes the wife of Brahma the creator 
and is also called Brahmi. She is supposed to have created the Sanskrit 
language as well as the arts and sciences. She is symbolized in the form 
of a beautiful lady with two arms holding a flute. 


54 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The river Saraswati is associated with the Surya-Grahana or the solar 
eclipse. On this day, the Hindus take a holy dip in tanks, ponds and rivers 
and pray to the Sun god for the souls of their dead ancestors. They fast 
for the day till the eclipse is over and after the ritual bath, they distribute 
alms to the poor. Legend says that the demons Rahu and Ketu caught up 
with the Sun and caused the eclipse. The very orthodox Hindus even beat 
drums on this day to scare away the demons. 

Thousands of pilgrims take a holy dip at Prayag, Hardwar, Varanasi 
and Soron. But the largest number are found at Kurukshetra, in Haryana, 
160 miles from Delhi. Here, on the banks of the river Saraswati is the 
tank of Thaneswar, which is considered most holy. Kurukeshetra is also 
called Dharmkshetra. Dharma or virtue triumphed over evil, here in the 
battle fought betwween the Pandavas and the Kauravas. This place besides 
being the site of a historical event, has also many legends attached to 
it. History propounds that the evil Kauravas had the kingdom of their 
cousins, the Pandavas. A fierce battle ensued between them and finally 
the Kauravas were completely defeated. The funeral rites of the slain were 
performed at the sacred tank of Thaneswar. It is here on the banks of the 
Saraswati that Krishna expounded his philosophy, which came to be know 
as the Bhagwada gita, the very essence of Hindu philosophy. 

Ganga, Yamuna and Saraswati make a confluence at Allahabad which is also known as Prayag. 



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CIVILIZATION ALONG THE GANGA 


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After receiving the waters of the Yamuna and the Saraswati at 
Allahabad, the Ganga now flows further on and not far away, 129 kms. (80 
miles) downward, it reaches the city of Benaras or Varanasi. This is the 
most famous and ancient city on the banks of the Ganga, and one of the 
most ancient cities of the world, formerly known as Kashi. The main 
temple here is dedicated to Lord Vishwanath (Shiva) and the lingam here 
is one of the twelve most sacred Jyotir-lingas. The temple has dominated 
the life of the city from very ancient times. The Hindus firmly believe 
that by the blessings of Shiva and Parvati, whoever dies at Kashi will be 
washed of all sins and will go straight to heaven. The town has derived 
its name from the two tiny tributaries of the Ganga, the Varuna and the 
Asi, on which it stands. There is a very interesting legend connected to 
this city. 

There was a holy man named Vyasadeva who was also very proud. 
He decided to build another city near Kashi and named it Vyasa-kashi. 
He then prayed to Shiva and pleaded with him to grant him his wish, which 
was that whosoever died in Vyasa-kashi would also go to heaven. Shiva 
at once granted him his wish. And so Kashi lost its importance. The holy 
priests of Kashi prayed to Goddess Durga to help them. 

Next day, an old woman went up to Vyasadeva and asked him, ’’Where 
does one go if one dies at Vyasakashi?” 

To which her replied, ”To heaven dear lady." The old woman pretended 
to be deaf and asked him again, "where did you say, one goes?" "To heaven," 
he replied a little irritatedly, "I can’t hear you well." "Can you say it again?" 
"One turns into a donkey," he yelled at her and shut his door. "So it will 
be," said the old woman, who happened to be none other than goddess 
Durga. And so the old people make sure that they do not spend their last 
days in Vyasakashi. 

The city if Benaras is a famous centre of Sanskrit learning. Scholars 
of Sanskrit have at one point or the other, studied in Benaras. Even Prince 
Siddhartha, who relinquished everything in life and attained enlightenment 
as the Gautam Buddha, went to Benaras to study Sanskrit. Benaras has 
5 very famous sacred ghats and altogether, there are 74 ghats. People 
carry out their pujas on the river banks, not only on the occassion of 


56 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The evolution of any civilization and culture is linked 
with the river of that area. The most famous and ancient 
city, a seat of learning, Kashi (now known as Benaras) 
developed on the banks of the Ganga. 



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great melas but all the year round. Well known for its bathing ghats, 
temples, ashrams, dharamashalas and mosques and for its brocade and 
silk, Benaras is also a popular tourist centre for visitors from all over 
the world. 



Situated 6 V 2 kms.( 4 miles) 
north of Varanasi is Sarnath. It 
is one of Buddhism's holiest 
places, appropriately situated in 
the land of it's founder's birth. 
It is here at Sarnath that Buddha 
preached his famous five 
sermons and the eight fold path. 

Flowing further down from 
Varanasi, the Ganga passes the 
town of Sonepur, famous for its 
cattle fairs for centuries. The 
river Sone joins the Ganga on its 
right bank near Sonepur. 

After leaving Kashi, the Ganga 
flows on its journey to the sea, 
touching numerous cities and 
towns. Three other tributaries 
join the Ganga on its left bank- 
the Gomti, Ghaghra and the 
Gandak. At the confluence of 
the Gomti and Ganga is the city 
of Lucknow, the capital of Uttar 
Pradesh and a centre of Muslim 
culture, also famous for its 
Chikan embroidery. 

Ninety-two kilometers 
south west of Patna is the town 
of Gaya, a very important 
pilgrim place for the Hindus, 








58 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


who come here to offer pindas or funeral cakes. The temple of Vishnupada 
built over a footprint of Lord Vishnu on the rocky west banks of the river 
Phalgu is the largest and most important temple of Gaya. 13 kilometers 
south of Gaya, in Bihar, against the Ganja-Bhindas Jethian range of hills 
and situated on the banks of the river Niranjana or Lilajan, is the sacred 
town of Bodh Gaya, where along the river bank under a pipal tree, (Ficus 
religiosa) on Buddha Purnima day, the Buddha attained Bodhi or 
enlightenment. About 4 kilometers north of Bodh Gaya, the river Niranjana 
joins the Mohane river and the united streams of the two form the Phalgu 
river which in turn merges with the Ganga. 

The festival of Buddha Purnima is celebrated with great reverence 
on the Vaishakha Purnima or the full moon day in the month of Vaishakha 
(May). It is mainly celebrated as the birth anniversary of the Gautam 
Buddha. He also attained Mahaparinirvana on this day at Kushinagar 
in Uttar Pradesh. The Buddhists believe that Prince Siddhartha (Gautam 


The city of Lucknow, famous for its chikan embroidery and a centre of Muslim culture is situated 
on river Gomti. 







CIVILIZATION ALONG THE GANGA 


59 


Buddha), his wife Yashodhara, his Charioteer Channa, his disciple Ananda, 
and the Bodhi tree under which he attained enlightenment, and also his 
horse Kantaka were all born on the same day. Thus it is revered as a thrice 
sacred day. 

The part mythical and part historical story of the birth and life of 
Buddha will give you a deeper understanding of this great preacher and 
founder of Buddhism. The Aryan King Shuddhadana of Kapilvastu was 
married to Mahamaya., the daughter of the Raja of the Kolyan clan. At 
the age of 45, she gave birth to a baby boy (around 563 B.C) and died 
seven days later. The baby was brought up by her younger sister Gautami 
and he was named Siddhartha Gautama. His horoscope predicted that he 
would either be a great world leader or a religious head. King 
Shuddhodhana did not want his son to be an ascetic and at the age of 16, 
Siddhartha was married to his cousin Yashodhara. Within the court of his 
palace grounds, he led a happy married life, unaware of the sufferings 
of the outside world. When he was 29 years of age, he came across an 
old man bent from his back, a sick person, a dead body and a holy person. 
Awareness of the sufferings of life dawned on him. On returning to his 
palace, he was informed about the birth of his son Rahul. But instead of 
rejoicing, he decided to relinquish all his luxuries in his quest for truth. 
He renounced his kingdom, his son and his wife, and left that very night. 
This is known as Buddha's Bhinishkraman. He crossed the river Anoma 
and asked his charioteer to return to the palace with his horse and his 
robes. From then on, he continued his journey for his quest for truth until 
six years later he attained Enlightenment. He continued to preach his 
philosophy till in his eightieth year on Vaishakha Purnima day, he attained 
his Mahaparinirvana or the 'great decease'. 

The festival of Buddha Purnima is also mentioned by the Chinese 
traveller Fa-Hien, who visited India in the fifth century A.D. The 
celebrations are traditional and very ancient, consisting of continuous 
chanting from Buddhist scriptures and worshipping of the statue of Buddha 
and distributing food and clothing to the sick. The Bodhi tree is also 
worshipped with milk and incense (scented water) sprinkled on its roots 
and its branches brightly decorated with garlands and colorful flags. Monks 


60 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


and laymen, all meditate alike and reflect on the great Eight Fold Path 
that the Buddha preached-right view, right aim, right speech, right action, 
right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness and right contemplation. 

The most outstanding site at Bodh Gaya is the Mahabodhi Temple, 
one of the oldest of its kind. Four towers rise from its four corners, giving 
it dignity and solemnity. A foliage of peepal trees surround it. To the west 
of the temple is the holy peepal tree, considered to be the oldest historical 
tree in the world. Other meditation sites in the vicinity are the Vajrasan 
(the throne of the Buddha), the Animeshalochana Stupa, the Chankramana 
and Ratnagar Chaitya. In 1945, the Chinese built a temple and monastery 
on the west side of the Mahabodhi Temple and in 1938 the Tibetan Mahay an 
Monastery was built. Besides this, the Japanese built a beautiful temple 
and the Burmese and Thai monesteries are also places of meditation. The 
Archaeological Museum is also a tourist attraction. 

It was at Bodh Gaya that the Budha preached most of his sermons 
and it was from here that the doctrines of Buddhism spread to the Far 
East. 

Now the Ganga enters the state of Bihar and it plays a dominant role 
in connecting the tributaries and channelizing the irrigation system of 
the state. From Patna, the Ganga moves eastward through Jehangira, 
Bhagalpur and Dhulia on the Bangladesh border. Not very far from Patna, 
the state capital, it is joined by three large affluents-the Ghagra, the Gandak 
and the Son. The important rivers that join the Ganga from the north are, 
from west to east, the Ghaghra, Gandak, Burhi Gandak, Kosi, Mahananda 
and their tributaries. In the Indian calender month of Kartika, a very popular 
fair is held on the banks of the river Gandak, just near the confluence, 
with the Ganga. This is the Sonepur Mela famous through history for its 
sale of elephants and later horses and cattle too. 

It is said that in prehistoric times a great fight took place between 
Gajaraj or the elephant. Lord of the forest and Garah the crocodile, 
Lord of water. A story in the Srimad Bhagawad tells us of a huge lake 
near the Trikut hill surrounded by dense forests with wild animals. An 
elephant came to bathe in the lake in which lived a crocodile. All the 
crocodiles of the lake and the elephants of the forest joined the fight. 


CIVILIZATION ALONG THE GANGA 


61 


In the end, the elephant began weakening and appealed to Hari, the Supreme 
God to save him. Hari helped free him in the presence of Hara and the 
other gods. 

Hindu mythology further tells us that in his previous birth, the 
crocodile had been a Gandharva chief named Hubu. He had gone to the 
lake with his consorts to bathe, where he playfully caught the leg of a 
holy sage, Dewala Muni, who was also bathing in the lake. The sage was 
enraged and in his fit of temper, he cursed Hubu and turned him into a 
crocodile. He remained that way till Vishnu cut his throat with his chakra 
to save the elephant. It is also believed that Rama built a temple here 
on his way to Janakpuri to win Sita's hand in marriage. The temple is 
dedicated to Harihar Nath Mahadeva and the fair is called Harihar Chhatra 
Mela. The fair lasts for a fortnight and the main days are two days before 
and after full moon. During the rainy season, the Ghaghra, which joins 
the Ganga at Chapra, often overflows its banks and inundates the region 
and yet it is a very important waterway of Uttar Pradesh. 

The Kosi drains a vast region of eastern Nepal and that includes the 
highest mountain peak in the world. Mount Everest. Tradition says that 
Janakpuri, in the Maithili speaking region of Nepal was the birthplace 
of Sita ( Ramayana ). And ironically, though the impressive river Kosi 
flows down from the Himalayan summit to the border of India, it ends 
up as a listless stream in the backwaters of the North Bihar Plains. 

The river Karnali flows down in an easterly direction from the south 
of the Kailash mountain range and along the Indo-Nepalese border, then 
turns south through the heavily forested Terrai zone and then merges into 

tr 

the Ghaghra. The Gandak is a snow-fed river formed by the union of 7 
Himalayan streams and flowing down from Nepal, it enters Bihar near 
Triberu and joins the Ganga near Patna, the former ancient city of 
Pataliputra, ruled by king Ashoka. The Gandak is also called the Trishula 
Ganga in Nepal, since it is formed by the confluence of 3 smaller rivers. 
The Burhi Gandak, though not snow-fed, has a continuous flow of water 
throughout the year. The river Kosi comes down from the mountains of 
Nepal at Chatra and flowing alongside the hills of Rajmahal, it enters Bihar 
as a mighty river, carrying with it sand and silt. During monsoons, it 


62 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


overflows its banks and causes havoc. The Mahananda is a very important 
easterly tributary of the Ganga in Bihar. 

From the south, the tributaries of the Ganga are the Karmanasa, Son, 
Punpun, Phalgu, Sakri and Kiul. Of these, the Son is the main river which 
has a vast networks of irrigation canals all over the state. The principal 
rivers of Chhotanagpur to the south of Bihar, are the Damodar, 
Suvarnarekha, Barakar and Koel. The Damodar rises from the Pakamu 
district and flows eastwards between the plateaus of Ranchi and Hazaribagh. 
The water of this great river is controlled and used for irrigation and power 
generating purposes, by the Damodar Valley Project which aims at an 
integrated economic development. For this, hydro-electric plants and 
multipurpose storage dams have been set up to irrigate vast tracts of land 
by means of canals. The Damodar Valley Corporation executes these 
projects. The other rivers mentioned are almost dry throughout the year 
and only in the rainy season will you find some water in their beds. 


Now the Ganga enters Bengal. The boundary between India and 
Bangladesh lies between Murshidabad and Rajshahi. Murshidabad with its 
many forts and palaces and famous for its silks was an important seat 


of the Muslim Nawabs. Further eastward on its course, the Ganga begins 
to split up and take the form of a delta. The Gangetic Delta is vast, almost 
48 kilometers from the Bay of Bengal. The two'main streams or channels 
are the Padma, which flows south-east to Goalundo in Bangladesh and 
the Hooghly. The Padma is joined by the Brahmaputra and the river is 
now called Meghna. Further down, the Flooghly and Padma meet again 
and near Ganga-Sagar, the combined rivers break up into a hundred or 
more channels, before it flows into the sea in the Bay of Bengal, after 
traversing a course of 1600 miles or 2465 kilometres. 


On the river Hooghly, about 144 kilometres upward from the sea, 
is the port of Calcutta, another famous city, over which looms the great 
engineering feat of the British, the Howrah Bridge. 

' Calcutta with its big international port is today a very busy commerce 
centre of India. Almost half of India's sea trade is handled at this port. 
The Kidderpore Docks with its huge cargo ships, handle millions of tons 
of goods, in the import and export trade. The main exports are jute, animal 


CIVILIZATION ALONG THE GANGA 


63 


hide, coal and tea. India also imports salt, petroleum and machinery. 
Thousands of people are employed at the Kidderpore Docks and in the 
,ship-building industry. Although a large port, Calcutta being over a 100 
kilometres inland from the sea, it has its hazards. Due to the large deposit 
of silt in the river, navigation becomes difficult. When the silt builds up, 
it is dropped by the river to make sand banks, but due to the change of 
course of the river, the exercise becomes futile. Very often, the river 
channel has to be dredged to keep it open and this leads to a delay for 
the heavily laden boats or ships, who have to wait till all the silt is cleared 
off. 

The city of Calcutta began as a European trading station in the year 
1700. Later it was the capital of the British India until 1912. A very 
crowded city, besides the sugar, paper, chemicals and cotton goods 
manufactured, the industrial centre of Howrah across the river has iron 
and steelwork factories making cars and trains. Near the river banks you 
will find many jute mills manufacturing hession, canvas and sacks. The 
raw jute fibre is brought from upstream regions by boat. About 50 
kilometres from Calcutta is the beautiful Diamond Harbour. The river 
here is so wide that you cannot see the other shore. The small tributary 
of Rupnarain falls into the Ganga here. 

The most prominent festival of all the Bengalis is the Durga Puja 
or the worship of Goddess Durga. The Hindus in Calcutta believe that 
Durga, the sister of Ganga was born in Calcutta. Legend says that she 
went to the Himalayas to become the second wife of Shiva. Every year 
she returns home to visit her parents residing at the mouth of the Ganga. 
She stays with them for a week and then returns to the Himalayas. This 
is the time when 'Durga Puja' is celebrated. During this period in every 
temple, the devotees build a statue of goddess Durga, resplendent in lavish 
and beautifully adorned clothes. The statue made of papier-mache is 
immersed in the Ganga when Durga returns to the Himalayas. 

There is an interesting story relating the birth of Durga. It says that 
an Asura or demon was troubling the three worlds of heaven, earth and 
the space between. His atrocities became unbearable and Shiva tried in 
vain to kill him. When he could not succeed he sought the help of the 


64 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


other gods. On Shiva's advice, the Gods performed a sacrifice wherein 
they all put their female Shakti (energy) into the sacrificial fire, from 
which arose a very beautiful woman and she was called Shakti. The gods 
requested her to kill Mahishasura. And on doing so, she is also called 
Mahishasuramardini. And when she killed the demon Durga, she came 
to be known as Durga. Durga is also called sarba janani or a goddess 
for all. 

The image of Durga is shown riding her mount, the lion, as well 
as in the act of killing the demon Mahishasura. The image is worshipped 
for 10 days with a lot of fanfare and on the 10th day, 'Vijayadashami' day, 
the day the goddess killed the evil Asura , the statue is immersed in the 
river. This immersion also symbolized Durga's return to her husband Shiva 
from her parents home. 

One of the mouths of the Ganga is at the southern tip of Sagar Island 
in the Bay of Bengal, where the Hooghly meets the sea. Here on this 
island, the Hindus belileve that a narrow creek on the southern side of 
the Ganga is Saugorkhal where the Ganga came down to redeem the 60,000 
sons of Sagara, who had been turned to ashes by the curse of Sage Kapila. 
Here, on 'Makara Sankranti' day, at the same time as in Hardwar and 
Allahabad, a big fair is held. People come from long distances to take 
a holy dip and Ganga Ma or the Goddess Durga is worshipped. The image 
of Sage Kapila is also worshipped. Materially, the end of Ganga is under 
the sea, 97 kms.(60 miles) further south. 


7 


The Fertile Gangetic Plains 


D escending from the Himalayas, the Ganga plains are a rich and 
fertile stretch of land with tropical vegetation and rice fields. As 
compared to this, the basin of the Sutlej consists of dry thorny scrubs. 
And when compared to the Indus plains, the natural vegetation of the 
Gangetic plain is different, since the rainfall gradually increases as one 
moves eastwards. From Punjab to Allahabad in Uttar Pradesh, is the dry 
sub-region, which receives an annual rainfall of 20-40 inches (50-100 
cms). The vegetation is quite sparse in the area. Acacia, Moringa, Peganum, 
Tecoma, Rhus, etc (botanical names) and a few variety of palms are found 
in this region. There are some areas of grassland interspersed with Butea, 
Zizyphus, Randia and Bombax. Where the soil is alkaline, the Salvadoca 
is commonly found. 

From Allahabad to West Bengal is the lower-gangetic region, with 
an annual rainfall of 76-100 inches (190-250 cms), the natural vegetation 
grows in abundance, with the Mangifera, Ficus, Polyalthia, Largeestomia, 
Areca, Lasuarina, Borassus, Artocarpus, Pterospermum and Bombax 
forming the natural flora of the plains. Several types of grasses and aquatic 
plants are found in the viscinity of tanks and small reservoirs. 

The Sunderbans form the third part of the Gangetic plain. This unusual 
region is around the delta of the Ganga. Stretching out from India into 
Bangladesh. The main characteristics of this region are its marshy swamps 
and interconnected waterways. The ’tidal swamp forests' as they are called, 
cover a vast area of over 6,000 square miles (15,500 square kilometers), 
the largest swamp forest in the world. The sea waters rush inland through 
narrow creaks. The flora of the Sunderbans is of great interest to the 


66 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


botanist, with infinite varieties of plants and moreover, the uncommon 
growth conditions makes it all the more interesting for study. Evergreen 
trees and shrubs, like the mangrove or littoral forests are prolific in this 
region. Typical mangrove trees like the Rhizophoras, Kandelia, Brugeira 
and Geriops are some of the 36 species of mangrove trees found in the 
Sunderbans but the 'Aoicennia officianlis’ is found in largest numbers. 
These mangroves are tall standing roots through which the boats weave 
their way. Their spikes stick out of the muddy ground and absorb air from 
the inner submerged roots. In the salty marshlands are found the Sindir 
(Heritiera minor), goran (griops roxburgliana) and kewa grass. The water¬ 
logged Delta region between the Damodar and Hooghly river is full of 
'Kana' (blind) rivers. It was once the home of the alligators and turtles 
and that of the tigers. But due to rapid urbanization, these animals and 
amphibians are getting sparse. 

Palms, like Nipafruiticans, Phoenix paludosa, coconut palms and 
calamus (cave) are also found. Savannah grass covers most of the little 
swamp islands. The vegetation is thick and they help to bind the mud and 
prevent it from being washed away. Elephant grass and screwpine grow 
near the various streams, ponds and canals. The dense forests of the 
Sunderbans give economic support to the inhabitants by means of produces 
of timber and firewood. 

Almost the entire region of the middle and lower Gangetic plain, 
is covered with evergreen tropical forests, extending right up to the slopes 
of the eastern Himalayas and Assam. Deer and water-buffaloes with their 
swept-back horns are found in abundance in the slopes of the Assam 
Himalayas along the Brahmaputra as well as in North Bengal. In the green 
and dense rain forests are found the single-horned rhinos, the elephants 
and the macaques (monkey) swinging in the tall canopy above. A great 
variety of birds such as sarus cranes, teals, ducks and swans have their 
homes here. The dense undergrowth is infested with reptiles. Animals 
visit the perennial pools of water and water holes in summer, when the 
riverlets dry up. In the savannah region, where there are open forests and 
low trees, you will find many grass eating animals such as the elephant, 
sambar deer, wild boars and the chital deer. If you visit the Kanha National 


THE FERTILE GANGETIC PLAINS 


67 


Park in Assam or the Corbett National Park in Uttar Pradesh, you will 
find them grazing in herds. 

On the western plains of the Ganga, between Delhi and Jhansi around 
the Shivalik ranges, are the Sisoo and Khair forest. There are the small¬ 
leaved blackwood thorny Acaccia trees used abundantly in making furniture 
and carved handicrafts. Between Delhi and South Rajasthan you will find 
a landscape of stretches of open land dotted with trees. This is a tribal 
homeland and the sal and babul forests are specially cultivated here. 
Though most of the Gangetic plain is cultivated, a variety of wild life 
still exists. In the forests of the terrai are found tigers, panthers, gerbils, 
antelopes and the black and gray gazelles. 

On most of the Gangetic plain there is a great thickness of alluvium 
which yields very fertile soils of varying textures. Farming is the main 
source of living of the people on the Ganga plains. Crops however depend 
on the availability of water. Systematic irrigation through canals has made 
the belt more fertile and whereas rice is the main crop grown in the delta 
region, in the middle Gangetic plain along with some rice, the more staple 
crop grown is wheat as well as maize, millet and sugarcane. Further up, 
where it is drier, wheat becomes the most staple crop, followed by barley. 

To reach the water table, tens of thousands of hand dug wells are 
used by the farmers. A popular mode of drawing water from these wells 
is by the oxen walking down an inclined slope and bringing up the water. 
Other animals along the Ganga are the elephants. They are tamed by the 
people and trained to move the logs from the forests to the river. These 
logs are floated on the river, till they reach the timber mils. Mahouts 
bathe the elephants on the river front. Buffaloes are another domesticated 
species of animals who are harnessed to the plough and help in the fanning. 
They are also used to turn the water-wheels to irrigate the fields. 

The fertile and densely populated valley of the Ganga is an important 
trade centre. Though long used by innumerable country boats and steamers, 
navigation is now restricted to only the lower parts of the river. Due to 
the various canals draining the waters of the Ganga as well as fluctuating 
water levels, trade along the river became less important. The railway 
and surface transport became the new mode of transportation. Old river 


68 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


ports began to decay and only in the delta region, below Buxar, where 
many places are only accessible by water, regular boat services are still 
plying. And so, on the Ganga waters, you will find fishing boats, house 
boats called oolaks , barges piled with cargo and even motor-boats. 

Dyeing is a thriving industry along the river banks. Though animal 
dyes are not used, vegetable dyes and dyes from plants such as safforn 
and indigo are often used. Fabrics with bright strong colours are rinsed 
in the Ganga and spread along its banks to dry. 

Inspite of the large quantities of waste material which is drained 
into the Ganga, the river is believed to carry no diseases, such as typhoid 
or cholera (water-borne diseases). The Hindus believe that this is because 
of the pure and holy properties the river possesses. The Ganga is 
considered so holy that the Hindus immerse the ashes of the dead into 
the river, with a firm belief that by its blessing, a new life is given to 
the dead persons. The people who have lived along the Ganga on its banks 
or on the plains, who have through the centuries spoken different languages 
and worn different clothes, have had different customs and different foods, 
had one common bond-they loved and revered the Ganga from its source 
in the Himalayas to the sea in the Bay of Bengal. Ganga, the eternal Ganga, 
flows on. 


8 

The Mighty Brahmaputra 


T he Brahmaputra is the other great river of the Himalayas. In fact 
from its source in the Mansarovar region to its mouth in the Bay 
of Bengal, the Brahmaputra is actually 250 miles (400 kilometers) longer 
that the Ganga. Considered to be a great river of Tibet, north-eastern India 
and Bangladesh, the Brahmaputra has a total length of 2,900 kms. (1,800 
miles). A greater part of its course lies outside the Indian territory. 

The source of the Brahmaputra is in the Kailas range of the Himalayas 
in western Tibet, from a huge glacier mass just south of the lake Gunkynd- 
Tso and it is nearly 5,100 meters above sea-level. The river flows out 
under the name Tsang-Po or the meaning in Tibetan language, 'the purifier'. 
Other tributaries join the infant river near the pass of Maryum La 5,150 
meters (16,900 feet). This pass separates its basin from that of the 
Mansarovar Lake area, the source of the other two rivers, the Indus and 
the Sutlej. 

The Tsang-Po flows parallel to the Himalayas at a rough distance 
of 160 kms. (100 miles) from the main chain. It flows through southern 
Tibet for a length of 1,126 kms. (700 miles). It cuts across the Tibetan 
plateau which has icy winds blowing across it through a greater part of 
the year and the climate is bitterly cold. It receives many tributaries and 
for most parts the area is uninhabited. Only along its banks will you find 
a few small settlements and tents with flocks of sheep grazing nearby. 
River Tsang-Po boasts of one of the most incredible navigation systems 
in the world, with boats plying in it for644 kms. ( 400 miles )at a height 
of 3,658 meters (12,000 feet) or more above sea level. These fascinating 
looking boats or coracles, are made of animal hide stretched over a 


70 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


framework of slender willow branches, making them very sturdy and 
strong. In some areas, boats shaped like oblong boxes are used as ferry 
boats. The wild and unpredictable course of the river and the deep gorges, 
become impassable natural barriers and it was only with the invention 
of bridges by the Chinese, that proper routes were made possible. Lianas 
and bamboos were first used which is a very ancient and traditional form 
of building suspension bridges. Later iron chain bridges took their place. 
Some of these bridges have a span of over 300 feet. 

At Tsela Dzong, the Gyamda river joins the Tsang-Po. At the point 
of their junction, the river is more than three kms. (2 miles) wide. It moves 
further eastward and flows along placidly and at Pe 2,950 meters (9,680 
feet) where it is 603 meters (660 yards) wide, it abruptly turns north¬ 
east and then north. At the eastern end, the ranges of the Himalayas rise 
again towards the scarcely known mountain masses of Namche Barwa 7756 
meters (25,446 feet) and the Gyala Peri 7,150 meters (23,458 feet), which 
are at a place almost 13 kms. (8 miles)apart. The Tsang-Po, now up to 
a kilometer wide, approaches these mountains slowly and suddenly 
narrows down to only 90 meters. The Tsang-Po cuts through these edifices 


The Brahmputra has a total length of 1800 miles.lt originates in Nepal, passes through India and 
flows through Bangla Desh beforeterminating in the Bay of Bengal. Its bed flanks to a breadth of 
5 miles and even more at Dibrugarh. 













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THE MIGHTY BRAHMAPUTRA 


71 


by way of a succession of stupendous gorges and crashes down between 
huge cliffs into a deep gorge. The river runs north-east and then making 
a hair-pin bend, it sharply turns south-east to reach the plains. 

The great Yarlung gorge, as it is known, is joined by the tributary 
Yekhung Chu at a little distance north-west of Lhasa. It drains the heavily 
glaciated Nyenchentanglha group of mountains which are over 7,000 
metres (23,100 feet) high. As it flows south-west, the Yarung passes a 
region which has many hot springs and then moves on through extremely 
dense rain forests to reach the town of Medog, only 1,500 metres (4,950 
feet) above sea level. Here the Tsang-Po turns south-west and past Tuting, 
it reaches the N.E.F.A. territory (now known as Arunachal Pradesh and 
Nagaland) and finally the plains of Assam, to the west of the town of 
Sadiya. Near Sadiya, the river receives the tributaries of Dibang and the 
Sesiri, the river Lohit from the east junction, changes its name from Tsang- 
Po to Brahmaputra (the river of God Brahma). Now it is several kilometres 
wide and is divided into many branches heading westward through the plains 
of Assam, for a length of 724 kms. (450 miles). Its channels oscillate 
from side to side over a bed which is sometimes 6 miles wide. It forms 
many islands in its course and Majuli is one of them, covering an area 
of 1,256 square kms.(485 square miles). During a flood, the Brahmaputra 
resembles an inland sea, when the waters overflow its banks and run riot. 

The Brahmaputra is once again forced to narrow down by the Shillong 
massif, sweeping around the Garo hills and flowing by the busy and well- 
known town of Guwahati, the river enters the alluvial plains of Bangladesh, 
through which it flows for anotherl42 kms. (150 miles) and finally 
merges with the Ganga at Goalundo. From the confluence of Teesta up 
to Goalundo, the Brahmaputra is called Jamuna. The united stream of the 
Ganga and Brahmaputra flows south-east under the name Padma and it 
is now a broad estuary. It is known as the Meghna as it reaches the Bay 
of Bengal. The two rivers together form one of the largest known submarine 
delta, consisting of material eroding from the Himalayas. The 
Brahmaputra is considered to be one of the most important rivers in the 
world, not only for its size but also its utility. It drains an area of 934,990 
sq. kms. (361,000 square miles). The turbulent currents of the Brahmaputra 


72 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


not only build up land in some places but also fertilizes it and distributes 
its produce. Navigable by steamer right upto Dibrugarh, 1,288 kms. (800 
miles) upwards from the sea, the river is a waterway for commerce and 
navigation both in India as well as Bangladesh. 

The Brahmaputra river has along its course many important cities, 
trade centres and places of historical significance. To trace them, let us 
go back to the source of the Brahmaputra in Tibet where the river takes 
the name Yarlung Tsang-Po. The first proper settlement, Latse, is 500 
kilometres from the source of the river. As the river flows further down 
into the broad valley, you come across the fortress of Shigatse. Further 
south is the town of Gyantse, a very strategic trade centre on the caravan 
route of north-south. The only mode of transportation in these treacherous 
mountains is the harrow paths and tracks or the waterway. There is an 
imposing fortress in Gyantse where in 1904, the British forces heading 
for Lhasa, had to face stiff opposition. 

Gyantse also boasts of the most beautiful Stupa Chorten or Kumbum, 
which stands out like a jewel. The Kumbum containing 100,000 pictures 
is a breath taking example of Tibetan art. It was built between 1414 and 
1425 and is still in a very good condition. Pilgrims walk around the Stupa 
in a clock-wise direction. 

Lhasa, the official seat of the Dalai Lama stands on the tributary 
of Kyi-chu and is 80 kilometres north-east of Gyantse. From very far 
off you can see the two hills-one which has the Potala, which is the palace 
of the Dalai Lama and the other is the Iron Mountain, a very famous 
medicine centre of the Tibetans, which was totally destroyed by the 
Chinese invasion. The Potala was founded by the 5th Dalai Lama. The 
holiest spot in Tibet is the Jorkhang, "The house of the Master," the Buddha. 
It is situated right in the centre of the town of Lhasa. Built in the 7th 
Century and enlarged in the 17th century, the Jorkhang has the most 
beautiful and sacred statue of the Buddha, the "Jobo Shakyamuni." It is 
the most important pilgrim centre and countless pilgrims come here from 
far away places. 

In the 7.th century, when Tibet was ruled by King Songtsengampo, 
it was his two wives who encouraged Buddhism. One of his wives was 


THE MIGHTY BRAHMAPUTRA 


73 


a Princes from Nepal and she believed in the Buddhist faith. The other 
wife was the Chinese Princess Wengcheng, who was the daughter of the 
Emperor of China and who was also a devout Buddhist. According to 
Chinese tradition, the sacred statue of Buddha was sent as a wedding gift 
for the Tibetan King. It was brought to Lhasa in the year 641. There were 
3 large monasteries in Lhasa-the Drepung, the Sera and the Gonden and 
since the 17th century, there have been around 20,000 Lamas living in 
these monasteries. But after the invasion of the Chinese in 1959 A.D., 
these monasteries have been destroyed. 

Eighty kilometres (48 miles) north of Lhasa, is the Nyenchentanglha 
mountain range. It borders the world's largest high altitude inland lake, 
the Nam Tso. It is at a height of 4,720 metres (15,576 feet) and is twice 
the size of Lake Constance in North America. 

As the Tsang-Po flows further eastward, it becomes broader and now 
the Yarlung valley is only 3,000 metres (9,900 feet) above sea level. And 
facing the Yarlung valley is the Yumbu Lakhang, or the "Fortress of Life." 
This is the oldest and still used fortress in the world, being 2000 years 
old. Built by the founder of the Yarlung dynasty, Nyathitsenpo, it was 
completely destroyed during the Cultural Revolution between the years 
1966 and 1976. But it was once again rebuilt according to the old plans 
and completed in 1985. 

The Yarlung Tsang-po moves on eastward and gives way to broad 
floor plans and vast sand dunes intercepted by short gorges. The natural 
vegetation also begins to thicken. The damp forests of the Eastern 
Himalayas consist of the birch and fir tree and a thick undergrowth of 
rhododendron and mountain bamboo. 

In the dense forests along the Dibang river in the foothills of Assam 
live the primitive tribe of the Abors. They are hostile and attack intruders 
with poison arrows, spears and long swords. In the Assam-Burma 
(Myanmar) border area, south-east of the Abors territory, are found the 
Mishmi tribe. The mountain tribe of the Mompas are spread out west of 
the Yarlung Tsang-Po bend right up to the border of Bhutan. Believed to 
be the largest ethnic minority of the Eastern Himalayas, the Mompas build 
their houses with stones and have horizontal beams in the middle. To the 


74 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


east and south-east of the Yarlung bend are found the Lopa and the Denpa 
tribes. These tribes live in wooden houses and they smoke exceptionally 
long pipes. Except for the Abors, all the other tribes are friendly towards 
outsiders, except of course, when they feel threatened and are pushed 
out of their homeland. 

Further westward, the Tsang-Po is joined by the Subansiri river. On 
the upper reaches of this tributary lies, at the height of 6,000 metres 
(19,800 feet), the Tsa-ti, the most sacred mountain of Eastern Tibet. 
Embedded between the glaciers of the north and the jungles of the south 
and forming a buffer between the eastern and central Himalayas is the 
tiny state of Sikkim. Between the Yarlung Tsang-Po in the north and the 
Brahmaputra in the south, at the western end of the East Himalayas, lies 
the Kingdom of Bhutan. The Kangar Punsum, at a height of 7,550 metres 
(24,915 feet), is the highest mountain of Bhutan. It’s name means the 
"Glacier of the Three Spiritual Brothers", establishing the peaceful co- 
existance of the three races. 

In the region of Ladakh, Bhutan and the Lahaul and Spiti valleys, 
which border Bhutan, Buddhism has taken a new form. Here Lamaism 
is the main religion. It was founded in the 8th century A.D. by an Indian 
monk named Padmasambhava who resided in Tibet. The Lamaism belief 
prophesises that as time passed, society degenerated and the teachings 
of the Buddha, of humility, non-violence and forbearance had no effect 
on the human beings and those who were doing good work and were pious, 
were considered weak. Buddha's teachings of counteracting violence with 
non-violent actions proved ineffective. Eventually, a new doctrine was 
perpetuated which said that violence had to be fought by an even more 
super and benign means of violence. It resulted in the Shamanistic cult 
mingling with Buddhism and a large number of powerful half-Buddhist, 
half-Shamanistic deities began to be worshipped. These deities are 
supposed to fight the evil spirits. 

Forty kilometers from Leh, the capital of Ladakh, is the Hemis 
Gompa, a very famous monastary and pilgrim centre. Every year, in the 
month of June, a festival is held here, to celebrate the birth anniversary 
of Padmasambhava. The festivities last for 3 days. The main attraction 


THE MIGHTY BRAHMAPUTRA 


75 


is the dances, where dancers represent both the cities and the evil spirits. 
The deities are supposed to terrorize the evil spirits and their masks are 
also grotesque and frightful looking. 

The Brahmaputra comes to its journeys end but will continue to flow 
down from the Himalayas for as long as nature takes its course. 


9 

Indus-The Mountain Lioness 


T he Indus or the ancient name given to it, the 'Sindhu', is the second 
largest Himalayan river and one of the mightiest rivers of the Indian 
sub-continent. This river is the deepest of all rivers in India and it has 
a very dominating presence. In the dry, geographical region of the 
Karakorums, she was the main source of life and resembled an 'untamed 
mountain lioness on the prowl!' From its source to the sea, it is 2,880 
kilometres long and geographically it is a river flowing through north¬ 
west India and Pakistan. Like the Yarlung Tsang-Po, the river Indus has 
its beginnings in a number of arms before you can pin-point its actual 
source. It rises in the Tibet region, from the glaciers of the northern slopes 
of Kailas parbat, 5,180 meters (17,000 feet) above sea level. The actual 
source river is the Lungdep Chu, which rises in the south near Kailas. 
Another tributary, Bokhar Chu joins it from the north-east. Above these 
is the Senge Khambha, or the 'Lion's Mouth', which is the official source 
of the Indus. In its upper course, the Indus flows north-westward in the 
valley between the Kailas range (north-east) and the Ladakh range (south¬ 
west) for a length of nearly 322 kms. (200 miles). The region is barren 
with a few desert like hills and though uninhabited, you may come across 
nomads living in black tents. 

As the Indus flows downstream it makes a gradual westward turn, 
past the old monastary of Tashigang, through a wide valley that runs along 
the famous Indus Yarlung suture zone, with the Ladakh range to its north¬ 
east and the Zanskar range in the south-west. The granite rocks of the 
Transhimalayas are visible to the north. The river flows through this region 
for 483 kms..(300 miles) and passes the fiord-like Lake Pengong Tso. 


INDUS-THE MOUNTAIN LIONESS 


77 


This lake is in the border of the Transhimala and Karakorum ranges. It 
is 150 kilometers (90 miles) long. About 20 kms. (12 miles) west of 
Leh, the capital of Ladakh, the Indus is joined by the Zanskar river from 
the south-west. The word Zanskar is derived from the coppery ore found 
in the rocks of that region. This junction of the two rivers, reflects the 
typical beauty of Ladakh, with the grey Indus merging with the coppery 
Zanskar in a symmetrical union. For several hundred yards you can 
distinctly see the imaginary middle line dividing the grey and the soft 
blue. At the base of the peak of Stok Kangri, you may come across flocks 
of the wild blue mountain sheep called the bharal. 

The wide Indus valley has the barren granite mountains to the north 
and the orderly Zanskar chain to the south. The southern end of the Zanskar 
glacier passes are at a height of over 5,000 metres (16,500 feet). Leh 
is the main town in these region and at one time it was the chief town 
on the great trade route to central Asia via the Karakorum pass. The 
impressive kings palace dominates the entire region. It was built in the 
early 17th century by King Sengge Namgyal, one of the greatest rulers 


The second largest Himalayan river Indus has its beginning in a number of arms before one can 
pin-point its actual source. On its way the Indus is joined by the Zanskar river near west of Leh, 
the capital of Ladakh. 




78 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


of Ladakh. In the town, trade was carried out and the people belonged 
to different races from all over Asia. But the Chinese invasion of Tibet 
brought an end to this trade and now military encampments cover most 
of the area. You will also find the highest airport in the region, at a little 
distance from Leh. 

Crossing the river by a wooden bridge you can reach the ancient 
Gompa of Alchi, which was once an exquisite architectural piece of Tibetan 
beauty but is now in ruins. 

Once the Indus leaves the Leh valley, with its dry climate, it enters 
the high altitude forest region with birch and fir trees and further on the 
mountain jungle with light or heavy forestation, depedning on the season. 
The houses in this region are made of wood and covered with shingles. 
The small temples with local deities have exquisite wood carvings on its 
doors. 

The Indus has now reached the Shyok valley. Near the town of Kiris, 
the river Shyok flows down from the Karakorum pass, flowing south-wards 
at first and then swinging sharply north-west aside the small town of Shyok. 
For the next 100 kilometers (60 miles) the Indus flows through the Gartok 
valley region through black hills, which were formed due to the suture. 
It then breaks through the granite chain of Ladakh to reach the Indian soil. 

The whole length of the 48 kms. (300 miles) long Indus valley cutting 
across the ancient kingdom of Ladakh and flowing in a northwesterly 
direction is similar to the Yarlung Tsang-Po, alternating between wide 
plains and short gorges. Like the Tsang-Po, the Indus also has ancient 
historical sites along its course, reflecting an old civilization. 

Once the Indus crosses the Indian border, it flows through the 
Pangong Tso and the Tso Moriri, two of the most beautiful lakes in the 
world. The Indus leaves the wide Ladakh valley at the small trading town 
of Kargil, which is a place of Islamic culture totally cut off from the 
Buddhist culture of the northern region. You will find the colourful domes 
of the mosques and minarets shining in the sun not only in Kargil, but 
in the villages around it. The broad Kargil basin is now used as a military 
trading centre. Flanked by river terraces, the Kargil basin is seperated 


INDUS-THE MOUNTAIN LIONESS 


79 


from the Mulbek valley which lies to the east along the 12 kilometres 
(7 miles) long Wakha gorge. In this region you will again find Buddhism 
prevailing and the mountainous town of Mulbeck surrounded by tall 
limestone cliffs, has chortens and small temples lining the trails and paths. 

The Indus flows along further on through deep deserted granite 
gorges, an uninhabited area and today, even a military bound area, where 
civilians are not allowed to encroach. The Indus emerges from the gorge 
only when it reaches Skardu, which was an important transit point between 
Kashmir and the Karakorum. Near Slcardu, which is the chief town of 
Baltistan, the Indus is joined from the north-west by the broad river Shigar. 
The Skardu basin is a region of wide desert valley with very high river 
terraces and sand dunes. At this point, the Indus after leaving Ladakh and 
the grainte gorge, has become a vast river. Flowing almost 160 kms. (100 
miles) north-west in the shadow of the vast Himalayan range, the Shyolc 
river joins the Indus about 30 kms. (18 miles) south-east of Skardu. Both 
the rivers are of the same size at the confluence, though the Indus has 
already flowed twice the length of the river Shyok. This is because the 
tributaries of the Shyok arise from very active glaciated regions of the 
Himalayas. The Indus flows further on from the Skardu basin past the 
Haramosh peak in a 3,040 meters (10,000 feet) gorge from where it 
suddenly turns south-west. 

The Hunza river now joins the Indus and its wide valley leads to the 
Baltistan town of Gilgit, which was a former transit town on the north- 
south route along middle Indus. At the foot of the Karakorum is the old 
castle of the Emir of Hunza. Little is known today of the Hunza tribe, 
but they had migrated from the north, had their own language and were 
spread over a vast region. 

Further south, the Indus flows along the north-west flank of the Nanga 
Parbat 8,125 meters (26,660 feet) through the wild Chilas gorge. In this 
region you will find exquisite rock carvings, revealing a history of over 
3,000 years of the caravan traffic along this north-south route. The river 
has now dropped to 1,000 metres (3,300 feet) above sea level and the 
area is covered with hot springs. The peak of Nanga Parbat is only 21 
kms. (12.6 miles) away from the river. 


80 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


Westward from the Chilas gorge, the Indus flows along, gradually changing 
its course in a southerly direction, through the Kohistan highlands of the 
north-west frontier region of Pakistan. As the direction of the river 
changes, so does the climate. As compared to the dry highlands, the 
southern winds make the region wetter and birch and fir forests flank 
the river sides and further south, even the oak forests abound. 

The Indus flows past Patan, an earthquake zone, and falls through 
more gorges. On the steep left flank of the valley, you can see traces 
of pathways linking the mountain villages. On the right bank is the new 
Karakorum road which turns off over a vast suspension bridge built by 
the Chinese. It then flows through vast unknown territory which has 
primitive tribes living among the highlands, often described as wild and 
ruthless, the river now leaves these highlands and reaches the plains after 
passing through some low lying hills. And it is here that the Indus is 
blocked by the Darbela dam, the largest in Asia which stores water in 
a large lake behind it. The dam is not completely water tight and water 
springs out from its lower walls. This is due to geological faults in the 
region right across the dam. The silt and mud carried by the river from 
the mountains collects behind the dam and this reduces the volume of 
the basin. The western tributaries of the Kunar, the Swat and the Kabul 
join the Indus further south. It's last lap in the mountains is through the 
famous salt hills which emerged 600 million years ago and are at the 
southern most tip of the west Himalayas. 

The great Indus flows through the plains of Punjab and Sind, past 
the ruins of the old civilization of Mohenjedaro, where it is joined by 
the river Nari. It then flows into the Arabian Sea to the east of Karachi. 
The submarine delta of the Indus is nearly as large as those of the Ganga 
and Brahmaputra. The Panch Ab or the 'five rivers' is how the state of 
Punjab derived its name, since it is a state which has five rivers flowing 
through it, all of which are the tributaris of the Indus. They are the Jhelum, 
the Chenab, the Ravi, the Beas and the Sutlej. Lord Rama is supposed 
to have sacrificed his life in the river Sutlej. 

The western most tributary of the Jhelum rises in the Wular Lake 
region. The Chenab flows from the Lahaul and Spiti region and the Jammu 


INDUS-THE MOUNTAIN LIONESS 


81 


and Kashmir valley. The five rivers enter Pakistan and form the Panch- 
nad. A significant and prominent pilgrim place is the holy mountain of 
Monimahesh, and to reach it, the pilgrims have to trek along the river 
Ravi, past the beautiful hill-station of Dalhousie in the Chamba valley. 
An important festival celebrated in the month in the Chamba valley of 
Himachal Pradesh in the month of Bhadra is the Minger Mela. On this 
day people dress up in their best attaire and gather at a cliff overlooking 
the river Ravi. They throw a 'minger' a silk piece of cloth tied with a silver 
tassle, into the river and propitiate the river-goddes to bless them and 
avert any calamities in their homes. 

The total length of the river Ravi is 710 kilometres and it flows 
into the river Chenab. Most of its journey is in the plains and it forms 
a part of the international boundary between India and Pakistan. Though 
the river is snowfed and perennial, it decreases in volume since it flows 
through regions with very little rainfall. The severe high temperature also 
evaporates its waters. However its journey through the flat plains enables 
good irrigation systems. The Ravi is also called the Iravati in Sanskrit 
and in the epic and Puranic Literature it is one of the Sapta Sindhu , 
the seven rivers of the Indus system, where Vedic culture thrived. The 
regions where the Panch-nad flow are very picturesque with terraced 
fields and fruit orchards. This is due to the fertile quality of the land along 
the river beds which carries fresh soil from the mountains as well as rotten 
vegetation, which acts as a natural manure. 

There is evidence of Hifidu and Buddhist religious places along the 
banks of the Indus in ancient times, as well as traces of Persian and Greek 
influence. In the lower Indus valley at Lothal, there is evidence of river 
goddess worship, 4,500 years ago. Throughout history, the Ganga was 
considered to be the central point of India's geography and the mighty 
and turbulant Indus got the position of being a boundary maker. But the 
Indus is the river of life for Pakistan and a majority of its irrigation depends 
on it. Also called the 'lion-mouthed river of the snow' or even 'snow- 
lioness' the grand Indus has a dominant presence and is the source and 
life in the Karakorums. 


10 

Sutlej-The Fast Runner 


T he Sutlej, another river flowing down from the Himalayas, rises 
from Tibet and is considered to be the fastest river of the land. Swami 
Pranavananda, an author of a very detailed and interesting book on the 
holy lake district of Kailas, has to his credit, of being the first person 
to find the true source of the Sutlej. It is very interesting to note that 
the Sutlej could be a river one year and the next year, a dry bed. This 
is one river which cuts across through the range diagonally and its source 
is the Raksas Tal, south of the Manasarvovar. Flowing from an elevation 
of 4,633 meters (15,200 feet), the length of the river is only 1,448 
kilometers( 900 miles) when it joins the Indus river in Pakistan. The 
Sutlej is the longest of the five rivers of Punjab. Flowing towards the 
west through Himachal Pradesh, it then turns south-west to receive the 
Beas, thus forming the border between India and Pakistan. In Pakistan, 
the river Chenab joins the Sutlej which has already received the tributaries 
of the Jhelum and Ravi rivers. Here the stream which collects the waters 
of all the five rivers of Punjab is also called the Panch-nad (5 rivers). 
Flowing southwards, the Sutlej finally joins with the Indus in the desert 
of Sind. The old name for the Sutlej was 'Satadru' which is derived from 
Sanskrit for 'fast runner'. 

Going back to its source, the Sutlej emerges from the Lake of 
Demons, and its source can only be seen when the water level is high. 
It seeps into the soil through gravel and rocks for some distance. Its first 
major tributary rises to the south at the Darma La Pass of the Himalayas. 
Since its volume and velocity is so intense, it is considered to be the 
main source of the river. The Shib Chu is the other tributary j oining up 


SUTLEJ-THE FAST RUNNER 


83 


with the Sutlej from the south. This is the beginning of the alluvial basin 
of the Sutlej, with spectacular horizontal terrace and deep gorges. This 
is the region where a hundred years ago famous mammal bones were found. 
Along the river Shib-Chu you will come across cave monasteries dating 
back to the time when the kingdom of Guge prospered. The whole region 
is covered with cliff fortresses and many sites show evidence of the Guge 
culture. 

The Chinese invasion of Tibet cut off this region from the rest of 
the world. The last researchers to visit these sites were the renowned 
Lama Anagarika Govinda and his wife Li Gotami, both of German origin. 
In his book, The Route of the White Clouds, he has given a fascinating 
description of the landscape of this region-"For us it was almost paradise, 
a magical world of extraordinary cliff shapes, that had crystallized to form 
huge towers rising hundreds of metres into the deep blue sky, like a magic 
shielding wall round a green oasis that was watered by springs and quick 
flowing mountain streams. The ridge on top of the cliffs was studded with 
temples, chortens, monastic buildings and the ruins of old castles and 
fortresses and from up there one had a splendid view of the valley, with 
its phlanx of tower like cliffs standing in rows one behind the other like 
organ pipes, all pierced by the hundreds of cave dwellings with their 
window openings. The greatest surprise however, was the main temple, 
which was not only undamaged but was crowned by a golden roof that 
shone among the cliffs and the ruins like a lost jewel... The remains of 
the old frescoes led us to the conclusion that this temple had been built 
towards the end of the 10th century A.D.-over a thousand years ago!" The 
Lama also made many copies of these works of art. 

In the alluvial basin of the Sutlej lie the ruins of the towns of Tholing 
and Tsaparang. In the year 1076, Tholing was the venue for a great religious 
conference held under King Tselda, in which all the religious dignitaries 
of Tibet participated. Buddhism had triumphed in Tibet. 

In 1625, a Portugese missionary, Antonio de Andrade reached the 
town of Tsaparang where the tolerant king permitted the priest to set up 
his mission. However, the king was unaware of the fact that this missionary 
had not come to exchange religious ideas but to wipe out Buddhism and 


84 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


preach his own teachings. The Buddhist priest began to mistrust the 
missionary and inspite of severe protests, the king continued to give him 
support. This led to an overthrow of the king and an end to the powerful 
Tsaparang dynasty. And by 1650, the kingdom of Guge was no longer on 
the map of Tibet and came under the rule of Lhasa. 

The river Sutlej now leaves the old kingdom of Guge and gushing 
through impassable gorges, it breaks through the Himalayan range, east 
of the Leo Pargial 6,980 metres (23,034 feet). You can reach these gorges 
via the Shipki Pass, leading into the high valley of Poo. A large number 
of Tibetan tribes are found here. These tribes barely have any contact with 
the Indian people, who live just a day's journey away towards the south. 
The Sutlej is now surrounded by woods in which live the Bhotia tribes, 
and further down, the Indian tribes. Due to the availability of oak and 
pinewood, these tribes-build simple wooden huts and also decoratively 
carved wooden houses with either shingle roofs or stone slabs. Their 
temples are unique tower like buildings’in which are enshrined their own 
local deities. The carved wooden pargolas and long wooden beams running 
acros the white walls are an architectural piece of art. Overlooking Shimla, 
the old summer capital of the British Raj, the Sutlej cuts through a steep 
gorge and leaves the Himalayas to flow along in a wide basin, depositing 
all the eroded material on its banks. It crosses through the irrigated plains 
of the Punjab and flows into Pakistan where it joins the river Indus in 
Sind. 

The longest of the five rivers of Punjab and with the most sacred 
source, the Sutlej has seen many ancient civilizations on her banks. The 
ruins of Harappa lie between the rivers Sutlej and the Ravi. The Sikh 
religion also regard the Sutlej as a holy river and past Kiratpur, at a serene 
and peaceful spot along the river, they perform the last rites of their 
religion. The Shrine of Kiratpur Sahib was founded by the 6th Sikh Guru, 
Sri Hargobind Sahib. The 7th and 8th Gurus were also born and brought 
up here. The sacred head of the 9th Guru Sri Teg Bahadur was received 
here by the 10th Guru and from here, taken in a procession to Anantpur 
Sahib for cremation. The river Sutlej has completed its rapid journey and 
it merges with the Indus to finally reach the Arabian Sea. The Bhakhra 





V- : , 






■ 


A dam on the river serves as a reservoir and also generates power for both domestic and industrial 
use. During the monsoon, it holds back the excessive water from the river basin to prevent 
flooding in the plains and during summer it is let off to irrigate the fields. Salal Project - Concreate 
Dam on River Chenab (Photo NHPC) 

Nangal dam on the river Sutlej is one of the highest in the world (226 
meters) almost three times as high as the Qutub Minar. It consists of 
five hydro-units of equal capacity. It does not serve just as a reservoir 
to collect water but also generates power and electricity for both domestic 
and industrial use. During the monsoons, the dams hold back the excessive 
water from the river basins to prevent flooding in the plains and during 
summer it is let off to irrigate the fields. 

The Jhelum is the most westerly of the Panch-ab (5 rivers) and is 
mainly a river of Kashmir and Pakistan. Rising in Kashmir, the Jhelum 
is 770 kms. long and emerges from the gushing springs of Berinag. It 
flows north-west between the vale of the main Himalayas and the Pir Panjal. 
It passes the city of Srinagar and through the Walur Lake. Nine bridges 




86 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


crown the river in Srinagar and the entire region is a tourists paradise. 
Srinagar, the capital of Jammu and Kashmir has a very chequered history. 
The early Hindu Kings reigned gloriously over this magnetic and beautiful 
region. A centre of great Buddhist activity during the reign of Asholca, 
it was later marauded by the Moghuls. During the reign of Aurangzeb, 
the Hindu Brahmins who formed a majority of the population, were forced 
to convert to Islam. Guru Teg Bahadur, the 9th Sikh guru, defended the 
cause of the Kashmir! Hindus were tortured for several days and later 
beheaded by Aurangzeb's men. The Brahmins who had got converted to 
Islam requested their Hindu king to take them back into the Hindu-fold. 
But the orthodox high priests of Benaras refused to concede. Later, the 
British left the shores of India and returned the constituencies to the native 
rulers. By October 1947, Pakistan had attacked Kashmir and the king 
acceeded to the Union of India. Kashmir has always remained a part of 
India from ancient times. The Shankaracharya who walked the length and 
breadth of India propagating his monastic theory of reality, built a temple 
a thousand feet high in Srinagar. Small steps lead up to the small temple 
of Shiva on top. At one time a beautiful path of polished stone led the 
pilgrims right from the Jhelum river up to the top, but it was destroyed 
by the Muslims. 

From Srinagar you journey to Pehalgam in the Liddar valley. From 
there a 46 kilometers arduous trek will reach you to the Amarnath caves, 
a very sanctimonious place of worship for the Hindus. The most auspicious 
time to visit the caves is in the month of August/September, on Sharvana 
Poomima day. In the Amarnath cave is enshrined a natural ice lingam which 
waxes and wanes with the moon. Along the trek you will cross Chandanwadi 
(16 kms.) Sheshnag, with a beautiful lake nearby and 'Panchtarini', where 
the five rivers meet. They are excellent camping sites on your way upto 
Amarnath. The three lingams represent the Lord's family-Shiva, Parvati 
and Ganesha. Nearby in the crystal clear ice waters of the Amaravati, 
pilgrims who dare brave the cold, take a holy dip. Anantnag is famous 
for its natural springs and it is on the way to Pehalgam. The largest of 
these springs is said to be the abode of Ananta, the serpant god on whom 
the Maha Vishnu reclined. It then flows south-west through the Baramula 


SUTLEJ-THE FAST RUNNER 


87 


Pass in the Pir Panjal and then north-west to reach Muzzaffarabad. About 
176 kms.(l 10 miles Southward it passes the city of Jhelum in Pakistan, 
thus forming a natural frontier between Kashmir and Pakistan. The city 
of Jhelum has prominent significance, in being an important river crossing 
on the northern highway during the invasions in the past. Besides it being 
a main railway junction, the Grand Trunk Road from Calcutta to Peshawar 
also passes the city of Jhelum. Onward on its course, the river Jhelum 
now traverses through the Salt range between Rasul and Find Dadan Khan 
and finally reaches the plains of Punjab. Its total course of 724 kms. (450 
miles) ends at Trimmu, where it joins the Chenab. From the foothills of 
Kashmir, the Jhelum not only forms a geographical boundary, but also 
serves as a good irrigation network. 

With this, we have covered all the big and small rives of the north 
as well as their tributaries and these comprise of the major rivers of the 
Himalayas which flow down to the plains in an easterly or westerly 
direction to merge into the Arabian sea or the bay of Bengal. These rivers 
have contributed greatly to the land and its people and through centuries, 
seen many civilizations along their banks. On them depend the life and 
sustenance of millions of people and from them, have they derived 
courage and faith and formed beliefs and religions which they celebrate 
along its banks. The rivers truly, are the mainstream of a country! 


u 

And the Mahanadi Meanders 


T he Mahanadi is one of the four great rivers of the north, the other 
three being the Ganga, the Brahmaputra and the Indus. It is mostly 
a river of Orissa and it is also one of the largest rivers of the country 
with a catchment area of about 1,20,500 square kilometers. Orissa abounds 
in rich minerals resources and vast timber forests. The various river 
systems that flow through all the districts, makes it a riverine state. The 
rich alluvial deposits brought down by the rivers from the higher regions, 
creates wide valleys and often heavy rainfall causes high floods, especially 
in the eastern districts and the coastline. 

The Mahanadi is the only one of the four great rivers which does 
not originate in the Himalayas, but rises from the wild mountainous region 
of Bastar and about 40 kilometres south-east of Raipur in Madhya Pradesh. 
Fed by the mountain springs that never run dry, it is one of the largest 
perennial rivers of India. At first, it trickles down as a small stream flowing 
easterly past Chhattisgarh. As it reaches the town of Seonarayan, it receives 
its first big tributary, the Seonath. Flowing through rock and wild terrain 
inhabited by wild animals and numerous tribes, the Mahanadi reaches 
Padampur and from there, suddenly turning south, it enters the State of 
Orissa near Sambalpur. It is here that the great Hirakund Dam has been 
built on the Mahanadi. With a width of 26 kms., it is one of the longest 
dams in the world, and was completed in 1960. It not only generates power 
and controls floods but serves as a source of navigation as well as 
irrigation. As the river gushes down its course, it is often barred by rocks 
and it weaves its way around them and if the rocks are soft, it sweeps 
through them,, causing extensive erosion. 


AND THE MAHANADI MEANDERS 


89 


Beyond Sambalpur, the Mahanadi flows onward, and through the hills past 
Sonepur, it finally descends through a deep gorge known as the Batakosia 
gorge 22 kms.(14 miles) gorge, to a region of dense forests. Flowing 
past the district of Puri, it enters Cuttack district at Naraj, which is 11 
kms. west of Cuttack town, through the deep Naraj gorge. During floods 
the Naraj gorge discharges upto 1,17,000 cubic meters of water per 
second! Here the river bifurcates into two rivers-the Mahanadi and the 
Kathjuri and they encircle Cuttack from the north, south and west. After 
flowing along eastward through wild bamboo forests, and gathering many 
tributaries on its course, it falls into the Bay of Bengal at False Point. 
Considered to be a strategic point at the mouth of a great river and ideally 
situated to make a trading port for large vessels and steamers to dock, 
in the early 1700, it was developed as a harbour and it enhanced the export 
of rice and other mineral ores. However, a tremendous storm in 1815 
destroyed the harbour completely, causing heavy loss of life and property. 
Today, the new port at the mouth of the Mahanadi is Port Paradeep and 
it is a prominent port on the eastern coast of India. Orissa has a coastline 
of almost 400 kms. 

The Brahmani and the Vaitarini are the other two important rivers 
of Orissa. The Bhahmani has a catchment basin of 3,560 square kms. and 
is 416 kms. long. It is made up of the combined streams of the south 
Koel and Sankha rivers rising from the Sundargarh district. The most 
important tributary of the Mahanadi is the Tel. Flowing past Bonai and 
Talcher, famous for its coal mines, it crosses Cuttack district at Jenapur 
and enters the Bay of Bengal at the Dhamru estuary. The Brahmani is always 
the major threat to the people of Cuttack district, especially during 
monsoons when it causes havoc after flooding the area. 

The Vaitarini rises from the Gonasika hills and enters Cuttack district 
near Balipur. As it nears Dhamru it joins with the Brahmani river and 
together they merge into the Bay of Bengal. The Vaitarini is considered 
a holy river and it is connected with the Ramayana with reference to the 
exile of Rama. The Subarnarekha is a small river with a total length of 
312 kms. originating near Ranchi in Bihar. In its course it runs only 48 
kms.in Orissa. It carries particles of gold in its silt. The Rushikulya and 


90 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


the Budhabalanga are the other two rivers which weave across the state 
of Orissa. The tributaries of the Godavari river such as the Kolab and 
the Sileru drain the Gangam and Koraput districts of Orissa. Thus, Orissa 
with its wet forest regions, its fertile river basins and its mineral resources 
is a state that is self-sufficent and progressive. The basins of the Mahanadi 
and Tel and the Bhrahmani and Vaitarini basins, together form one of the 
most fertile areas of India. 

Besides these perennial rivers, we also have the torrential rivers, 
such as the Ajay and Damodar. During the dry months these rivers are 
wide sand beds with a small pool of water at some places. But during 
the monsoon months they are in spate and cause sudden floods, which 
leads to heavy loss of cattle and crop. The Ajay is a river of West Bengal 
and its source lies in the high lands of Chhota Nagpur. Surrounded by 
green rice fields on either side, the Ajay flows past the plains of Birbhum, 
which is also known as the rice-bowl of Bengal. The Damodar on the other 
hand rises from the Khamarpet hills of Bihar through the rocky areas 
of the plateau of Chhota Nagpur. It comprises of many small streams which 
join up to form one main stream. It finally joins up with the river Rupnarain 
and together they merge into the river Hooghly, about 110 kms. from 
the Bay of Bengal. The total length of the Damodar from its source to 
its junction with the Rupnarain, is 538 kms. This torrential river could 
only be brought under control due to the efficient and organized efforts 
of the Damodar Valley Corporation. With the damming of the Damodar 
not only is the threat of floods reduced, but it also generates electricity 
and improves the quality and quantity of crops through the irrigation canals. 


12 

Narmada-The Jata Shankari 


f f r H throughout the ages geography has made us one great 
JL land, the common culture has made us one land and 
our common aspirations, our common hopes and fears, 
victories and defeats, have made us one. That is the past. 

In the present, by our common labours, common sacrifices 
and common struggles, we gained the freedom of India... 

The past and present have provided a common ground 
to us. So also must the future be common to us, the future 
we are striving to attain, the future of millions of our 
people, their welfare. In whatever region we may live, this 
calls for unity of purpose, unity of endeavour and 
sacrifice ." 

- Jawaharlal Nehru 

The Spirit and thought that go into these prolific words seems to 
flow in its true essence, in the rivers of India-whatever terrain they cross, 
they unite the great country that is India, acting as an anchor for the vast 
million whose existance depend on them. 

The Narmada is one such river. It is a great river of Central India 
which has been sacred to the Hindus through the ages. Unlike most other 
rivers of India which flow eastwards into the Bay of Bengal, the Narmada 
and the river Tapti are two waterways which, typical of rift valleys, run 
parallel to each other and flow into the Gulf of Cambay or Khambhat, 
near Bharuch, in the Arabian Sea. It flows from east to west. Navigable 
only in the lower course, upto 80 miles (130 kms.), the Narmada has 
an estuary that is 13 miles (21 kms.) wide. The region it flows through 
is, geologically amongst the oldest formations in the world. 


92 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


Both the Narmada and the Tapti share the same geomorphology with 
old Mesozoac rock at their sources and the lower valleys, leading to the 
young Quaternary alluvium in the middle course and the coastal region. 
The entire tract of the Narmada is pre-Cambrian and Palaeozoic which 
geologically is millions of years older than the Himalayas, which are 
Mesozoac at their oldest and Pliocene and Pleistoceme at their youngest. 
The Narmada infact is older than the Ganga and is also supposed to have 
descended from heaven by falling on the jata (top knot) of Shiva and that 
is why she is also called 'Jata Shankari'. She is as sacred as the Ganga 
is if not more. Bathing in the waters of the Narmada is believed to purify 
all sins and the priests consider its sanctity to be even greater than that 
of the Ganga. The orthodox Hindu mythology claims that the Narmada 
river has given status to Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. According to Vishnu 
Puranas one gets rid of ones sins by bathing thrice in the river Saraswati, 
for seven days in the Yamuna, for one day in the Ganga, but it is the mere 
sight of the Narmada that absolves one of all sins. The Ganga is holy in 
Kankhal, the Saraswati is holy at Kurukshetra, but whether it flows through 
villages or forests, the Narmada is sacred everywhere. 

The Narmada rises in the Vindhya mountains in the Shahdol district 
of Madhya Pradesh. Its source is from the Amarkantak hills of the Maikala 
range of the central highlands. Within an area of two square kms. of 
Amarkantak, three great rives arise-the Narmada flowing westward into 
the Arabian Sea, the Son flowing north-east into the Ganga and the 
Mahanadi flowing south and then east into the Bay of Bengal. Of its total 
length of 1,312 kms. the Narmada flows 1,070 kms. in Madhya Pradesh, 
35 kms along the boundary of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, 39 
kms.along the boundary of Maharashtra and Gujarat and 166 kms. through 
Gujarat. 87% of its catchment area is in Madhya Pradesh and most of 
its tributaries join the Narmada in this state. 

Flowing through thick jungles and narrow gorges, the Narmada 
sharply turns into deep valleys and has beautiful scenic waterfalls along 
its course. It is the southern frontier of the kingdom of Harshavardhna 
and the northern frontier of the Chalukya dynasty of ancient India. From 
its source to its mouth, it journeys 1,312 kms., fast-flowing untamed and 


NARMADA-THE JATA SHANKARI 


93 


wild, cutting through high marble rocks, red sandstone hills and vast coal 
deposits. Since it is not dammed, it has caused heavy loss of life and 
property during floods. 

The name Narmada means 'making one happy.' It's dazzling blue 
waters with craggy granite beds makes the river look gentle and beckoning. 
However, it is decieving to the eye. In the upper regions, due to the rapid 
flow of the water, erosion takes place and the pebbles in the river almost 
take the shape of lingas, thus making the river very holy. The followers 
of the Shiva cult believe that Lord Shiva resides in every white quartz 
pebble found in the Narmada. Infact, Shive himself is represented by a 
white pebble in the Panchayatana Puja, where the five symbols of Shiva, 
i.e., the Naga, Linga, Nandi, Trishul and Dakshinamurti (Shakti facing 
south) are worshipped. 

According to a legend of the Vishnu Purana, in the Patala region 
(region below the earth) lived a race called the Gandharvas or the 


Rivers have a personality of their own. Settlements build up on their banks and civilizations 
flourishes. River Shipra with temples and buildings on its bank. 
















94 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


Mauneyas (they were the sons of Muni Kashyap). These Gandharvas had 
defeated the tribes of the Nagas or serpant gods and seized their kingdom. 
The serpent chiefs prayed to Lord Vishnu to deliver them from their 
enemies. Lord Vishnu said that he would enter the body of Purukutsa, 
son of Mandhatra, to help get rid of the Gandharvas. The Nagas sent the 
Narmada to assist Purukutsa. On reaching Purukutsa she then took him 
to the region below the earth where he defeated and destroyed the 
Gandharvas. In appreciation of her assistance, the Nagas conferred upon 
her a blessing that whoever invoked her would never be harmed by a snake¬ 
bite. Vishnu also fulfilled his promise to the Nagas and assumed the form 
of Purukutsa, whose wife Nagi is considered to be a personification of 
the Narmada. They had a son who was named Trasadasyu. The Narmada 
is also represented as being the daughter of Rishi Mekhala and is also 
called Mekhala Kanya, she is a mind born daughter of the Somapas, a 
class of Pitris, she is a sister of the Nagas or serpants; she is the daughter 
of Soma, the moon; and she is also known as Indu-ja and Somadbhava. 

Due to its divine origins, many devout Hindus wish to die on the 
banks of the Narmada. If not they would like their ashes to be immersed 
in the river. The Hindus believe that even the river Ganga comes once 
a year to the Narmada taking the form of a black cow and bathing in its 
waters. This is the auspicious day which is celebrated as Narmada Mata 
Jayanti, the birth of the river Narmada on Magha Shukla Saptami, i.e. the 
seventh day of the bright half of the lunar moon, two days after the spring, 
harvest festival of the north, Vasant Panchami. On this day, bathing in the 
waters of the Narmada is considered more auspicious than bathing in the 
Narmada and Ganga together. The festival is celebrated all along the river. 
The most important pilgrimage centres along the course of the Narmada 
are Amarkantak, Omkar, Mandhata in Madhya Pradesh and at Chandod in 
Gujarat. At Hoshangabad in Madhya Pradesh, individuals light a lamp and 
set it afloat on the river on a dona , which is a shallow vessel made of 
leaves and decorated with flowers. This is done to attain blessings for 
the departed souls of the family. Now the festival has gained great 
eminence and after sunset, 21,000 diyas (lamps) are set afloat on the 
river and the turnover of pilgrims goes beyond 1,00,000 people! The 
festivities take the shape of a village fair and there is a lot of merrymaking 
and revelry. 


NARMADA-THE JATA SHANKARI 


95 


Another sacred ritual performed by the devout Hindus is a 
pradakshina of the river Narmada or the ninety-six stage circumbulation 
from Bhrigukhagmam (vedic name for Bharuch) to its source at 
Amarkantak and back downstream on the opposite bank of the river. There 
are pilgrim centres all along the course of the river-Paragat, Omkara, 
Parvani, Karnali, Shukia Teertham and Bharuch. Half-way down the river 
in the gorge section at Mandhata, where the Narmada cuts into the Vindhya 
scrap is the island town of Omkeshwar, said to resemble the sacred 'Aum'. 
Here is the famous Omkarnath temple, where lies one of the twelve Jyoti 
lingas. The site was destroyed by Mahmud of Ghazni during his march 
to Somnath in the year 1024. However, some of the splendid construction 
still remains. Though the whole island represents the abode of Shiva, there 
are a number of Vaishnavite and Jain temples on the river banks. It was 
here that the ancient ritual of committing suicide was practiced. It was 
eventually put to an end by the British. It was also at Omkareshwar, that 
the young Shankaracharya came from Kerala to receive initiation from 
his Guru. Like Hardwar, Omkareshwar is one of the most revered of 
teerthas of the Hindus. 

The Narmada also flows along the town of Mandu, famous in history 
for the romantic love story of Baz Bahadur and Rani Roopmati. 

Then along the river there is the town of Maheshwar, which was once 
an ancient Kingdom with many temples and palaces. Near the Shukia 
Teertham is a small island, where the poet-saint Kabirdas lived as a hermit 
under a banyan tree. Narmada in her yogini (ascetic) form is shown 
standing on a crocodile. She is the dark daughter of Shiva and Parvati 
born from the nectar of her fathers throat. She is therefore also depicted 
as a beautiful ascetic in tiger skin and holding a trident. At the temple 
of Amarkantak, Narmada is represented by two idols of goddesses, one 
black and one white, both facing each other. Near Bharaghat, where the 
river is smoothly flowing, on the hill-top, is the temple of Chausath Yogini, 
and it has beautiful carvings. 

The Narmada rises at 11.00 meters and drops in a series of falls 
to a bed level of 15.8 metres at Navagaon in Gujarat. It has well-defined 
banks and flows through some very picturesque terrain of natural beauty, 


96 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


with gorges and majestic falls like the Dhardi. It is a virgin river flowing 
pure and unsullied from its source to sea. 

For a major part of its journey through Madhya Pradesh the Narmada 
passes through cliffs and rocks, rapids and waterfalls, hills and whirlpools 
and through thick tropical and dry deciduous forests of sal in the upper 
regions and teak and bamboo in the middle and lower regions. All along 
its bank the Satpura range runs alongside the river to the point where they 
meet the Vindhyas at the source of the river. The Narmada plunges down 
25 meters over a cliff at Kapildhara. Traversing through wild country 
between the Mandia mountains, it takes a right angled turn over the 
Dhuandhar falls (fall of mist) before cutting a gorge through the famous 
marble rocks near Jabalpur. Then is a 320 kms. long valley south of 
Jabalpur and Hindiya. This fertile silted valley lies between the Vindhya 
and Satpura range. The Narmada flows through more thick jungles and 
hills before it reaches the plains of Gujarat. From here onwards, the river 
is navigable by boat and ferry. 

The Mahadeo hills of the Satpura range is famous for being Kipling 
country, where the forests of Seoni, Chindwara and Batui, are the habitat 
of the characters in 'Jungle Book'. High up at the source of the river is 
tiger country and according to the statistics of 1987, 1,800 of the 4,000 
surviving tigers of India are found in this region. 

Some of the important tributaries of the Narmada are Bangar with 
its confluence at Mandhata, the Sher and Shakkar which join it at 
Narsingapur, the three small tributaries of Thava, Chotathava and Kanjal, 
joining the Narmada at Hoshangabad. The Hiran is the only tributary from 
the north which joins it near Jabalpur. Though not yet dammed, the waters 
of the Narmada irrigates an area of more than 90,000 square kms. Infact, 
68% of the working population of Gujarat is agriculture based. Besides 
cotton, oil seeds, tobacco and millet are the main crops of Gujarat. Though 
it is an agricultural state, its main source of irrigation is wells. Only when 
the Narmada project is completed, will the state benefit extensively in 
the irrigation sector. The river has an estuary more than a delta since its 
swift flow prevents silt deposits at the mouth. 

Though the Narmada has flown since centuries through the wild and 


NARMADA-THE JATA SHANKARI 


97 


rugged mountainous regions inhabited by tribals and remained an ancient 
pilgrims path, the recent development of damming the Narmada will drown 
the beautiful temples along its banks and destroy the tribal culture that 
is so prevalent and typical of the region. The Basin Development Plan 
includes the construction of 29 major dams, 450 medium dams and 3,000 
minor dams on the river and its tributaries. When this project is completed, 
it will constitute the largest river basin development in the world. Though 
the project was planned several years ago it faced a lot of threat from 
environmentalists. But the insistance of carrying it through by the state 
of Gujarat has made the central government give the clearance for the 
construction of the Sarovar at Nawagaon in Gujarat and the Indira Sagar 
or Narmada Sagar at Punesa in Madhya Pradesh. Five other projects have 
already been completed-the Tawa on the Tawa river, Sukta on the Sukta 
river, Bargi Phase I and Bargi Phase II on the Narmada river and Kolar 
on the Kolar river. The Kolar is primarily a drinking water project to 
provide water to the city of Bhopal. Between Narmada Sagar and Sardar 
Sarvohar, a total capacity of 1,800 megawatts of hydro-electricity is 
expected to irrigate over 19 lakh hectares of land in Gujarat. By doing 
so, the Rann of Kutch will be converted into a green belt. The Narmada 
waters will also feed the parched towns of the Saurashtra region of Gujarat. 

The other river that flows westward from the Deccan region is the 
Tapti or Tapi. It is also an ancient river and flows from the Riksha hills 
in the rugged tribal area of Betul. The name Tapti is derived from the 
hot springs which are found in the fertile valley north of the Ajanta range. 
It is from here that the Deccan plateau range begins and moves on in a 
southerly direction. This area is of historic, biological and meteorological 
significance-the Mughals and the British moved through the heart of India 
via the Burhanpur Gap; the southerly monsoons also penetrate through 
to move northward; there is also a biological explanation to the species 
of animals of the extreme south having their counterparts in the north, 
in the foothills of the Himalayas-due to the drifting apart of the landmasses 
of the Satpura. The Tapti flows out from a sacred tank at the small little 
town of Multai and moves westward for 720 kms. The two rivers rising 
from the north-west Deccan plateau, both named Purna, form tributaries, 


98 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


one joins the Godavari that is flowing eastward and the other joins the 
Tapti to run eastward. 

The riverside fair of Vautha is held on Kartika Purnima in the 
Ahmedabad district of Gujarat. It is held at a place called Saptasangam 
teertha , which is 61 kms.(38 miles) from Ahmedabad. The teertha has 
derived its name from the fact that it is sangam (confluence) of Sapta 
(seven) rivers, namely the river Sabarmati and Vatrak and the other five 
being Hathamati, Meshvo, Khari, Majham and Shedhi, which are the 
tributaries of the former two rivers. The fair held at the confluence of 
these rivers is one of the largest fairs of Gujarat and largely attended 
by both the rural and urban communities. Devout Hindus bathe in the 
Sangam and also perform puja for the dead. At night, lighted earthenware 
lamps are placed in shallow bowls made of leaves and set afloat on the 
waters. 

On Raksha-bandhan day, which is celebrated to tie the bond of love 
and protection between brothers and sisters, another celebration also takes 
place on the river banks and beaches all over Gujarat and Maharashtra. 
Fairs are held and people gather at the water-fronts and offer coconuts 
to Varuna, God of waters. This is the full moon night of Narial Purnima 
and people offer coconuts to the sea as well, to appease its fury. This 
is the end of the monsoon period and after performing the Narial Puja , 
the fishermen set out fishing on the high seas. Those living away from 
the coast offer coconuts to rivers, lakes and tanks in their viscinity. On 
this day the three castes of Hindus, namely the Brahmins, Kshatriyas and 
the Vaishyas, change their old sacred threads for newer ones. 

Ganesh Chaturthi or Vinayaka Chaturthi is celebrated in honour of 
Ganesha, the God of wisdom and success and the remover of obstacles 
(Vighneshwara). He is always propitiated at the beginning of any important 
event or even the start of any education. The Puranas say that he was 
worshipped even by the gods-Brahma worshipped him before creation, 
Vishnu before vanquishing Ball, Shiva before destroying the three cities 
of Tripura, Durga before vanquishing Mahishasura, Seshanaga before 
carrying the earth on his head, and also Kamadeva before he conquered 
the universe with his arrows of love. 


NARMADA-THE JATA SHANKARI 


99 


The legend of Ganesh's birth is very popular and even today, granny's 
narrate the story to their grand children. Parvati, the wife of Shiva had 
no children and she felt very lonely and felt the need of someone she 
could trust and love. One day she rubbed the dirt off her body and mixed 
it with oil. From that dough she moulded the image of a boy and Brahma 
breathed life into it. Parvati was delighted and named him Ganesha. She 
appointed him as her doorkeeper to guard her appartment. One day, while 
Parvati was bathing, Shiva walked in, unawares of the little Ganesha. He 
fought Shiva and tried to prevent him from entering the appartment. In 
the fight that ensued, Shiva chopped off Ganesh's head. Parvati was 
unconsolable at the loss of her son and asked Shiva to bring him back 
to life. Shiva asked the assembled gods to go and fetch him the head of 
the first animal they found sleeping with his head facing the north. And 
that happened to be an elephant, and thus, Ganesha the little boy had the 
head of an elephant. 

There is another intresting story about Ganesha. Ganesha loved to 
eat and one of his favourites was modak (sweet rice balls). One day, he 
ate one too many and decided to go to the forest to digest them. Seated 
on his mount the mouse, he set out, but on the way, Vasuki the snake slid 
across their path. The mouse took fright and bounced off making Ganesha 
fall to the ground. His overstuffed stomach burst open and modaks came 
rolling out. Ganesha ran after them and picking them up one by one and 
stuffed them back into his belly. To prevent them from falling out again 
he tied up his stomach using Vasuki the snake as a belt. It so happened 
that the moon and his wives were watching it all and they burst out laughing. 
Ganesha was offended and he cursed the moon. That is the reason why 
the moon has a scar. Ganesha also announced that whoever saw the moon, 
would face a calamity. The moon begged for forgiveness for his insolence 
and Ganesha finally gave in. But, he told the people that they would not 
look at the moon only on Ganesha's birthday. And therefore on Ganesha 
Chaturthi day devotees are forbidden to look at the moon. 

On this auspicious day, devotees throng the rivers and the seaside, 
bathe in it and worship the clay image of Ganesh and offer sweets to him, 
especially modakl Devotional songs are sung and the image is finally 


100 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


immersed into the river or the sea. He is also the god who grants a good 
harvest and therefore clay is collected from the immersion side and thrown 
into the fields to bring good luck for the next harvest. 

With this we conclude our journey along the rivers, but only of those 
in the northern regions of India and in the central Deccan. In the following 
chapters we will learn more about the various rivers of the south, which 
are as significant to its people and the country they live in. 


13 


Godavari-The Dakshina Ganga 


T he river Godavari is the real divider of north and south India, 
enfolding in its course across the sub-continent, the religious 
sanctity of the northern rivers as well as the aboriginal trend of worship 
of nature and its forces of the south. One distinctive feature differentiating 
the rivers of the north and the south is that the rivers of the north are 
perennial, flowing throughout the year, since they are fed by the monsoon 
rains as well as the snow of the Himalayas, whereas the rivers of the south 
are fed by the north-east and south-west monsoons. During these months 
they tend to overflow their banks but during the summer months they are 
narrow streams in most places. 

The Godavari is also called the 'Dakshina Ganga'. It's 1,450 kms. 
course entails it to being the longest of the east-flowing rivers of the 
south. It flows along the northern Deccan, descending from the Western 
ghats, or the Sahyadri range near Nasik, which runs from the river Tapti 
to Terkhol creek near Kanyakumari. 

The watershed of the Sahyadris especially in the central parts of 
Karnataka with its wooded ghats and spectacular waterfalls are 
breathtakingly beautiful sights. The main source of the Godavari, within 
sight of the Arabian sea, is 129 kms.( 80 miles )from Bombay, near the 
Thai ghat and it flows south of east into the Bay of Bengal. It is twice 
the length of river Kaveri and her drainage basin is the second largest 
in India. As compared to the Ganga whose drainage basin is 25% of the 
total area, the Godavari covers 10% of the total area. 

The 200 year old black stone temple of Trimbakeshwar marks the 
source of the Godavari. It houses one of the 12 ' Jyoti' Lingas' of Shiva. 


102 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 



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GODAVARI-THE DAKSHINA GANGA 


103 


The Godavari rises from the high plateaus behind Trimbakeshwar and 
trickels down into the tanks built around the temple. The main tank of 
Kushtvertha has an architectural beauty of its own and it enhances the 
sanctity of the temple and its surroundings. One has to trek a steep and 
treacherous path to reach the actual source of the Godavari. High up on 
the hills is a kund or a tiny stone well from where the water trickles 
down the walls of the black cliffs and from here it forms a narrow stream 
flowing past Trimbakeshwar and onward, to reach Nasik. This is one of 
the four sites of the kumbh mela or the Sinhastha mela held every 12 
years and about which you have read in detail in the previous chapters. 
Along the banks here, there are 2,000 temples and numerable bathing 
ghats. There is an incident in the Ramayana that relates to this city. When 
Laxman, brother of Rama was fed up of the persuations of Surpanakha 
(sister of Ravana) to marry her, he chopped off her nose and it fell where 
Nasik stands today. The Godavari here is very polluted. It is also believed 
that Rama and Sita stayed on the banks of the river at Panchavati. 

Up in the hills around Nasik are the hill-fortresses of Shivaji. The 
highest peak here is the Brahmagiri 1,262 meters (4148 feet) where the 
river takes a steep turn and flows on past the town of Paithan, famous 
for its silkweaving. At Brahmagiri it was sage Gautam Buddha who 
performed penance after killing a cow and hence the name Godavari. 

Numerous dynasties ruled, conquered and diminished in these regions 
of the Deccan-the Satavahanas and the Chalukyas were spread across 
Maharashtra and more than a century and a half later, the Marathas ruled 
Andhra and Tanjore. The Rashtrakutas of Karnataka were the builders of 
the Ellora and Ajanta caves near Aurangabad. These caves were scooped 
out of rocks over 10 centuries ago. There are 34 rock-cut temples here, 
representing Hindu, Buddhist and Jain faiths. Nearby,96 kms. (60 miles) 
from Aurangabad are the Ajanta caves, (30 in number) of the Buddhist 
faith. The ancient city of Vijaynagar also came up in the Deccan a century 
later. But these civilizations were marauded by the advent of the Moghuls 
in India. 

As the Godavari flows further east, it enters the state of Karnataka, 
past the Manjra valley and the rocks of Golconda. It is now joined by 


104 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


its northern tributary, the Purna before it reaches Nander, the Gurdwara 
town of Huzoor Sahib, where the Sikh Guru Gobind Singh was assasinated 
in the year 1708. 

By now the river has entered Andhra Pradesh and flowing past 
Warangal near the 80th meridian, it is joined by its tribal tributary, the 
Pranahita, which has its source in Maharashtra and it brings down the 
drainage of the Mahadeo hills. The famous Ramappa temple raised by 
the Kakatiya dynasty and well-known for its architectural beauty is situated 
north of Warangal. The tributaries of Indravati and Sabari (associated with 
the story of Rama), also joins the Godavari. The course of the Indravati 
marks the border of Madhya Pradesh. 

The Manjra is its main southern tributary and it drains a large part 
of the former state of Hyderabad, which is now partly in Maharashtra 
and partly in Andhra Pradesh. By now the Godavari is 4 kms. wide but 
this again is only during the monsoon season. Here along its banks is 
the temple of Kaleshwaram, in which is one of the three lingams which 
gave Telengana the ancient name of 'Trilingadesh'. The river flows 
peacefully on, the colour, a light blue. 

Near Khammam and Kottagudem, across the bridge over Godavari 
is the temple of God Bhadrachalam, associated with the Ramayana. The 
forests around this part of the Godavari are the Vanaprastha land where 
Ram, Sita and Laxmana spent 14 years in exile. The temple of 
Bhadrachalam on the hill-top is one of the fore-most of Rama temples 
and legend says that at Parnasala, a place 30 kilometres from 
Bhadrachalam, Ravana had abducted Sita and it was here that Rama and 
Laxmana had crossed the river Godavari when they began their journey 
in search of Sita. Bhadrachalam is also famous for being the home town 
of Ramdas, a devotee of Rama, whose songs are so well-known all over 
the country. The story of this great poet is quite interesting-Ramadas was 
a tehsildar and his real name was Gopanna. There was an old woman in 
his Tehsil who once had a dream in which she saw three idols in a forest 
on top of a hill. The next day, accompanied by her daughter, she went 
into the deep forest and found the idols of Rama, Laxmana and Sita, on 
top of the hill, just as she had visualised in her dream. She became their 
devotee and would go up to worship them everyday. When the people of 


GODAVARI-THE DAKSHINA GANGA 


105 


her village asked her about her daily visits to the deep forest, she told 
them she was going to a temple. They were amused by her answer, since 
they believed that there was no temple in the dense forest. Once, the story 
of her mysterious visits to a temple reached the ears of Gopanna the 
Tehsildar'. But he took her story seriously and went with her to see the 
site. When he saw the idols under a thatched roof, which Thimakka had 
made herself, he underwent a great transformation. And from that day 
onwards, he decided to spend the rest of his life singing praises of Lord 
Rama. He also built a beautiful temple here. Very soon people came from 
far and wide and journeyed through the forest to hear Ramanna and also 
visit the temple, and they named him Bhadrachala Ramadasa. Today 
Bhadrachalam is no longer a small village but it is a pilgrim centre and 
has 24 temples all clustred in close proximity. The stone temple built 
by Ramadasa and housing the idols of Rama, Laxmana and Sita is right 
in the midst of them. The legends also say that Lord Bhadrachalam himself 
is supposed to have descended on earth in the form of a human, to ransom 
Ramadasa, who was later taken prisoner by a Qutb Shahi King. 

The Godavari which was flowing in a wide valley and frequently 
breaking up into several channels, now flows into a different geographical 
region. Many tributaries join the Godavari as it flows along. The Pranahita 
which has its source in Maharashtra joins the river followed by Indravati 
and the Sabari further down. At this juncture, the Godavari is four 
kilometres wide. But it once more narrows down when it flows through 
the Eastern ghats. From the junction of Pranahita, the Godavari leaves 
the lava plateau region and enters a trough of eroded rocks that extend 
right up to the sea. This feature is responsible for the wide break in the 
Eastern Ghats and also for the wide depth of the coastal plain at the mouth 
of the Godavari and Krishna. 

Ninety seven kms.(60 miles) from the sea, the river leaves the trough 
and breaks through the ghats and falls in a magnificent gorge which is 
only 182 meters (200 yards) wide. The vast delta of the Godavari is 
virtually parallel to that of the river Krishna and infact both the rivers 
are connected by canal. 

The Godavari now curves into the prosperous town of Rajahmundry, 


106 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


formerly known as Rajamahendravaram, which is close to the ancient site 
of the capital of the Eastern Chalukyas. Here the Godavari flows as a 
broad and mighty river. The railway bridge on the river here is the second 
largest in India and contains 56 spans. Rajahmundry is an ancient and 
traditional town, having seen many dynasties. Once every 12 years, the 
'pushkaran' festival is celebrated here, which is as sanctimonious as the 
kumbha mela at Prayag. The temples along the river here are dedicated 
to Markandeya and Kotilingeswara. The famous classical poet of the 11th 
century, Nannaya, as also the renowned Telugu writer, Veersalingam 
Pantulu, both lived in Rajahmundry. Here is located another well-known 
temple of Draksharama. 

The Qodvari flows on and finally reaches Dhavaleshwaram, which 
boasts of a dam constructed by Sir Arthur Cotton, in as early as 1845. 
He came to India from England as a young lad of seventeen and was 
working in the Irrigation Department. He had seen the stone Anicut dam 
(a low dam which directs the stream flow into the head of the canal) built 
on the river Kaveri by the Chola kings and he designed and built this dam 
along those lines. He also built another dam on the river Kaveri called 
Melania or the upper Anicut. He is the man responsible for the building 
of a dam on the river Krishna near Vijayawada. Not only did he build the 
dam but also planned a canal system that would fill the lakes and tanks, 
which in turn would improve irrigation. He is remembered even toady 
as the pioneer of a well-planned irrigation system in southern India. 

After the Godavari surpasses Dhavaleshwaram, it is divided into three 
streams-the eastern stream is called the Gautami Godavari, meeting the 
sea at Yenam, the middle stream is called the Vaishnava Godavari, which 
merges with the sea at Narsapur. All the three together form a vast fertile 
delta area and it is considered to be one of the richest rice-growing regions 
of India. Rich in legend, the word Godavari signifies the giver of cows, 
a euphemism for prosperity. It is also known as Gautami as it was supposed 
to have been brought down to earth by sage Gautama. The Godavari delta 
attracted the French, the Dutch and the English settlers and it served as 
a very useful waterway, making travel easy through the ferry system, 
besides being a mode of transportation of teak logs and bamboo. It's banks 
are rich in teak and bamboo forests. 


14 

Krishna-The Inland River 


T he Krishna is another inland river of the south, rising from the hill- 
station of Mahabaleshwar in the northern Ghats of Maharashtra from 
a height of 1,400 meters above sea-level. It is at a distance of 64 kms. 
from the Arabian Sea and 145 kms. south-east of the city of Bombay. 
An earlier summer capital of the British Presidency during British rule, 
it is even today, a very popular hill-station for the citizens of Bombay 
as well as the people of Gujarat. The total length of the river from its 
source to its mouth is 1,290 kms. It starts as a small spring near the temple 
of Panchaganga. Krishna has 10 main tributaries joining it from the north 
and south. The river Bhima is one of the main tributaries, flowing 720 
kms. before it joins Krishna, north-west of Raichur. 

At Mahabaleshwar, the shrine of Shiva and the Krishnabai temple 
are places to visit. Infact the Krishnabai temple claims to be the source 
of five Deccan streams-the Krishna, Koyna, Venna, Savitri and Gayatri. 
They emerge from a large white rock just behind the temple. The beautiful 
valley of Koyna has now been dammed but the people live in constant 
fear of the tremors caused due to its being located in the earthquake zone. 

The Krishna flows east-ward, past the picturesque hill-station of 
Panchgani, to reach Satara. Close to Mahabaleshwar is the well-known 
fort of Shivaji at Pratapgarh. The historical and popular incident of the 
Muslim general Afzal Khan, who was also the brother-in-law of Emperor 
Akbar, needs mention here. Shivaji had invited him to his fort but the 
Muslim general smuggled in a knife with the intention of assasinating 
Shivaji. But Shivaji had also hidden on his person, the metal claws of a 
tiger and managed to overpower Afzal Khan and kill him as well. The claws 


108 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


are on display at the Shivaji museum at Satara. Where the river Bhima 
joins the Krishna you will find the remains of Buddhist architecture. 

Pandharpur is a popular pilgrimage centre on the banks of the Bhima. 
The presiding deity is that of Vithala, the Vaishnava deity of the Bhakti 
cult. Legend says that once a Brahmin named Pandalik went on a 
pilgrimage with his wife and old parents. While his wife sat on a mule 
during the journey, his parents trudged along behind on foot. At Pandharpur, 
he took refuge at the house of a very pious brahmin, who looked after 
his old parents with great devotion. Pundalik also saw three richly-dressed 
women doing the menial chores of the house. These women were actually 
the river goddesses Ganga, Yamuna and the Saraswati, who volunteered 
to work for a good son who worshipped his parents. Pundalik was ashamed 
of his own neglect of his parents and decided to settle down in Pandharpur. 
One day Lord Krishna appeared at his doorstep while he was serving his 
parents. Without looking, he threw a slipper at the intruder. Krishna was 
very pleased with Pundalik’s devotion towards his parents and he left his 
image on the brick which the temple enshrines. It is said that the deified 
saint was a later incarnation of Krishna. The deities of Vithoba or Krishna 
incarnate and Rukuba or Rukmini are worshipped with great reverence 
at this temple. 

The trunk road from Hyderabad to Bangalore crosses the river 
Krishna near Kurnool in Andhra Pradesh, where it is joined by another 
southern tributary, the Tungabhadra. It is the most important and longest 
tributary of the Krishna. The two rivers, the Tunga and the Bhadra meet 
near Shimoga. 

Not far from Shimoga is Sringeri, the birthplace of Adi 
Shankaracharya, who founded his first math there. A very beautiful temple 
with the pillars of the Zodiac, carved during the dynasty of Vijayanagar 
is also found there. The town has a very serene and scholastic atmosphere. 

The river Tungabhadra is part of the Krishna river system and yet 
is a separate river by itself. The Tunga and Bhadra have their source very 
close to each other on the Gangamula peak of the Western Ghats near 
Mysore, at a height of 1,200 meters. The Tunga turns north-east past the 
town of Sringeri and beyond Teerthalli and its mountain caves. Flowing 


KRISHNA-THE INLAND RIVER 


109 


through bamboo forests and coffee plantations, and then through deep 
valleys between broken chains of hills till it joins the Bhadra at Kudli. 
From here on it is known as the Tungabhadra. Three other rivers join it 
in Mysore State-the Sharavati, the Kumudvati and the Varada. The 
Tungabhadra flows as a separate river for a distance of 645 kms. This 
river is of great help to the people of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. It 
brought relief to the districts of Raichur and Rayalaseema which were 
frequented by droughts and famines. Across the river at Mallavpuram near 
Hospet, is built the Tungabhadra dam. The water stored is used for 
irrigation as well as for electricity. 

On the banks of the Tungabhadra, 14 kms. from Hospet, are the runis 
of Hampi, stretching out 26 kms. once the seat of the runied city of 
Vijayanagar. The wild and beautiful landscape is as overpowering to the 
eye as the ruins. The epic Ramayana says that on either side of the 
Tungabhadra in these hilly regions, is 'Kishkinda', the country of the 
monkey King. It is here that Rama met Hanuman and Sugriva, the monkey 
king. The river site is called Pampatira and is considered very sacred since 
time immemoral. The area was given the status of a city and named 
Vidyapuri or the city of learning and later around 1336, it was renamed 
Vijaynagar or the city of Victory, by the two brothers Haribara and Bukka 
who were advised by the Saint Vidyanarayana to build this city here and 
defend the Hindu faith from the onslaught of the Muslim invasions from 
the north. The empire survived for almost 250 years and it was at the 
peak of its glory during the region of Krishnadevaraya. Travellers came 
from as far as Persia, Russia, Portugal and Italy and wrote praiseworthy 
accounts of the place. The city was completely destroyed by the combined 
forces of the Deccan Sultans in 1565, when they mercilessly slew more 
than 100,000 inhabitants and pillaged the city for nearly 6 months. 

The Vij aynagar kings built many stone dams on the river Tungabhadra 
in the 14th and 15th centuries. Modern engineers have constructed a dam 
across the river at Mallapuram near Hospet. The Gudappah Kurnool canal 
is one of the largest canals feeding the region. 

The temples of Vitthala, Hazara Rama Temple, depicting scenes from 
the Ramayana and the Mahabharata , the Mahanavami Dibba or the royal 


110 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


sent from where the King watched the Mahanavami festival and the lofty 
Veerupaksha temple built later in 1510, by Queen Lokamahadevi in honour 
of the victory of King Vikramaditya over the Pallava capital of Kanchi, 
dating to the 9th century, are the historical remains along the river. The 
Tungabhadra joins the main river near Kurnool in Andhra Pradesh. 

The Krishna river comes down the ghats pear Raichur. The hill-tracts of 
Karnataka are mingled with innumerable small rivers such as the 
Hiranyakashi, Varna, Vedganga, Dudhganga and Panchaganga. They all flow 
eastward into the Krishna. You will be surprised to know that fifty eight 
rivers, large and small, rise from the 2.000 million years old rock bed 
of the Deccan! 

Near Kurnool, on the southern bank of the Krishna, is the tiger 
reserve of Nagarjunakonda, the heartland of the tribe called the Chenchus. 
This region was one of the finest Buddhist centres of the ancient world. 
Archaeological findings discovered in 1926 proved that this site named 
after the great Buddhist philosopher Nagarjuna, who lived in the 2nd 
centuary A.D. was the capital of the Ikshavaku dynasty. The sculptures 
and inscribed pillars created in memory of the dead kings, queens, nobles 
and artisans and even the religions persons, mostly from the 3rd and 4th 
centrury, are on display at the island museum where the site has been 
reconstructed. A university had flourished here in the 3rd century A.D. 
and evidence shows that students came from Ceylon, Japan, China, Tibet 
and Siam. Also discovered were relics of underground drainage systems, 
open air burials and bathing ghats. The Nagarjunasagar Dam which is the 
largest masonry dam in the world was constructed on the river Krishna 
here. 

As the Krishna flows onwards towards its final journey to the Bay 
of Bengal, we now come to another very important piligrim centre - 
Srisailam. In the ancient past it was also an important Buddhist centre 
and has been mentioned by the Chinese travellers Huan Tsang and Fa Hsein 
in their travelogues. The town is situated in a plateau in the Kurnool district 
of Andhra Pradesh. And down below, the Krishna flows by in a deep valley 
and here it is known as the Patalaganga or the Ganga of the neither regions. 

The Mallikarjuna temple on the hill was extolled by the Saivite priests 


KRISHNA-THE INLAND RIVER 


111 


in the 7th century. The Jyotiralingam, manifesting one of the 12 forms 
of Shiva is worshipped by the devotees. Great rulers in the past have visited 
this hill temple and made valuable contributions- to mention one name, 
the Vijayanagar king, Krishnadevaraya. The Maratha chieftain Shivaji was 
so overcome by the beauty of the forest teertha that he decided to build 
dgopuram at Srisailam. Famous for its frescoes, bas-relief and sculptures 
depicting scenes from the Ramayana , the Mallikarjuna temple enshrines 
within it, the main deity of the Chenchu tribe. It has a thousand steps 
leading down to the river Krishna. It is said that these steps were built 
by the Reddis of Kondaveedu in the 15th and 16th centuries. It is also 
said that Lord Shiva married a girl called Lakshmi of the Chenchus tribe 
and these tribes people are great devotees of this temple. Mahashivaratri, 
the festival that marks the end of winter is an important festival at this 
temple. Thousands of pilgrims take a dip in the Patalaganga and visit the 
temple for a darshan of Mallikarjuna. 

The famous philosopher Saint of the 8th century, Adi Shankaracharya, 
also spent a few years of his travels at Srisailam and bathed in the 
Patalaganga everyday. 

Between the rivers Bhima and Krishna is the ancient city of Bijapur 
with the Mausoleum of Mohammad Adi Shah, the Muslim ruler of the 
Deccan, Gol Gumbaz, built in 1659 and considered to be the second largest 
mausoleum in the world. 

The Krishna flows on further eastwards and reaches the town of 
Amaravati, the capital of the Satvahana Kings and also a well-known 
Budhhist centre which has a stupa , exactly like the one in Sanchi, but 
intact, even larger in size. 

Further on along the river a little before Raichur, is the popular 
temple of Mantralayam, in memory of Raghavendra Swami, a saint of 
the Dvaita School, who took jivan samadhi-d Hindu philosophy where 
a Saint wants to leave this world on his own will and he gets constructed 
a room with an opening on the top. He then sits in the centre of the room 
and his disciples wall up the opening. He meditates till he breathes his 
last. 


112 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The Ahobilam hill temple is 140 kms.south-east of Kurnool and is 
dedicated to Lord Vishnu in his lion incarnation, Narasimha. 

The river Must is the third tributary of the Krishna. It starts south of 
Hyderabad and flows southward. The Must is also historically connected 
to the Fort of Golconda, situated 13 kms. from the city of Hyderabad. 
This was the capital of the Qutb Shahi dynasty. It was founded by the 
Turkoman Sultan, Qutb Quit Shah, who was the Governor of Telengana 
under the Bahamani Kingdom. In 1512, he declared himself independent 
and established Golconda as his capital. In 1687, the fortress was 
treacherously beseiged by the Moghul Emperor Aurangzeb, though it was 
held out by the last Qutb Shahi king for seven long months. The main 
citadel is on top of the hill, and one of the finest tombs of the royal cemetry 
is that of Abdullah Qutb Shah. Golconda is also famous for its diamonds, 
yeilding the famous Kohinoor among others. 

Beyond Raichur the Krishna flows through hilly terrain and reaches 
the city of Vijaywada. It descends nearly 120 kms. within a distance of 
5 kms. The river which flowed rapidly down the hills and mountains now 
slows down its pace. From here onwards, boats begin to ply on the Krishna 
and they are used for fishing upstream on the river. 

Vijayawada (medieval times known as Rajendracholapuram, (after 
Rajendra I) is surrounded by many hills, the most important being the 
Kanika Durga Hill and the Sitanagaram. The goddess Kanika Durga and 
Lord Malleshwara Shiva are greatly revered by the people of Andhra 
Pradesh. 

Three kms. east of Vijayawada, on the banks of the Krishna, are the 
Pallava caves of Mamallapuram. These caves, Saivite in nature stretching 
16 kms. along the river were excavated in the 6th century A.D. and the 
Akkanna Madanna cave in Vijayawada is considered to be one of the earliest 
among them. Legend goes to say that in the hills around Vijayawada, Arjuna 
lived and did penance in worship of Lord Shiva and for that, he was granted 
so powerful, that he could not be defeated. A few kilometres south of 
Vijayawada begins the delta region of river Krishna. Buddhism was once 
the main religion of this area. Relics and ruins in towns along its banks 
have proof of it. Amaravati is one of the towns. It is believed that the 


KRISHNA-THE INLAND RIVER 


113 


'Deathless People', who had obtained the boon of freedom from death, 
once lived here. And that is the reason, the city is named Amaravati. Near 
the present town was situated Dharanikota, an important Buddhist centre. 
Once the capital of the Satavahan Kings, it is now in ruins. The stupa 
at Amaravati is exactly like the one at Sanchi, but bigger. 

Sixty-five kms.east of Vijaywada, the river divides into two. The 
southern branch further breaks up into many tributaries and they join up 
after a few kms. to meet the sea at Masulipatnam. The river Krishna after 
its arduous journey, finally merges with the sea in the Bay of Bengal. 


15 

Kaveri-The River of Life 


T he Kaveri is the shortest in length amongst the 7 holy rivers of 
India and is often called the Ganga of the south. It is also known 
as the river of life beneficially influencing the lives of the people living 
along its banks and tributaries. Many great centres of Tamil culture were 
spread on its banks, and the river has been glorified in great lengths through 
Tamil literature, music, religious liturgy and the culture of the land. The 
river's rich heritage is reflected in the creative abundance and proves the 
truth of poet Illango's thoughts, that the Kaveri sustains. 

Flowing through the areas of Mysore and Tamil Nadu, the total 
length of the Kaveri is 756 kms. It's source lies in the Sahyadri range 
on the Brahmagiri mountain in Mysore, 1,320 meters above sea-level. 
The region of Kodagu or Coorg is the main source of the river and it 
is within sight of the Arabian Sea. Bhagamandalam, a forest habitation, 
is the last villlage at the base of the mountain from where a bus goes 
up to Talakaveri, the actual source of the river. It lies near the border 
of Karnataka and Kerala. Towering over the jackfruit trees and coffee 
plantation is the Agastaveera temple with the images of Goddess Kaveri 
and Goddess Lopamudra painted on the wall. The temple is built in the 
true Kerala style. 

The spring from which the Kaveri emerges is in the form of a trough, 
four feet by four feet. Pilgrims take a holy dip in the tank, which is also 
fed by the spring of another smaller tank. From here the Kaveri flows 
into a third hollow and disappears underground, surfacing again after some 
distance. Flowing downhill for about 6 kms. she reaches Bhagamandalam, 
where she swells up into a proper size of a river. 



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The Kaveri is often called the Ganga of the south. It's source lies near the border of Karnataka and 
Kerala in the Sahyadri range and it flows through the states of Karnataka and Tamilnadu. 


There is a legendary tale sung about the birth of the Kaveri which 
goes to say that there was a childless king named Kaveran who did tapas 
or meditation and Brahma gave him a boon in the form of a daughter. 
Later, Sage Agastya fell in love with her and asked for her hand in marriage. 
Kaveran agreed but with a condition that he would never leave his daughter 
alone. Agastya promised and the marriage was solemnized. They lived 
blissfully in a hermitage and Agastya never left his wife alone or out of 
his sight. But one day he got so engrossed in teaching his disciples that 
he did not return home. Kaveri thought the worst had happened to her 
husband and decided to end her life. 


She jumped into the tank where her husband had his daily bath. 
However, she did not die and disappeared underground in the form of a 
river. Flowing up the Brahmagiri mountain, she reappeared as a spring. 
In the meanwhile, Sage Agastya, who was searching in vain for her, 
suddenly spotted her in the form of the spring and implored her to return 
to her home. Kaveri agreed after some persuasion but only as half her 
form. The other half would continue to enrich the land where she would 


116 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


flow as the river, Kaveri. And every year, on a particular day in the month 
of October, the Tulasangam festival is celebrated as the birth of Kaveri 
by the people of Coorg, to whom she had promised an annual visit. On 
this day, a holy dip in the tank is considered as auspicious as taking a 
holy dip in the Ganga. 

There is yet another legend about Kaveri's birth which says that a 
Rishi named Kavera did intense meditation and Brahma gave him a boon 
in the form of a daughter named Lopamudra. The Saint gave her hand in 
marriage to Saint Agastya. Legend says that she was manifested in two 
forms-one was the human figure and one was in the form of holy water 
in the Kamandala or the Tuja , vessel of Agastya. One day, a crow toppled 
the vessel and the 'holy' water started flowing endlessly from the foot 
of an aonla tree. 

Another myth goes to say that Agastya Muni prayed to Shiva for 
water to found a holy place. Kaveri also prayed to Shiva, who then filled 
Agastya's bowl with Kaveri water. When Agastya reached south India, he 
sat down to meditate with the bowl in front of him. At the request of 
Lord Indra, Ganesha disguised himself as a crow and sat on the edge of 
the bowl and upset it. And the water flowed out as the river Kaveri. 

At first it was just a spring at Talakaveri and at the foothills at 
Bhagamandalam it gathers its first tributary the Kanaka, along with another 
sub-terrien spring called the Sujyoti. Flowing along its course, the Kaveri 
receives the tributaries of Hemavati, Lokapavani, Shimasanadi, Arkhavati, 
Thoppaiyaru, Sarabhanga and Manimuthar from the north and from the 
south it receives the tributaries of Hole, Sagarghate, Lakshmantirtha, 
Kabini Kundala, Bhavani Noyyal and Amaravathi. Through thousands of 
years, many tales have been told about the great river Kaveri and they 
reflect the gratitude felt by the generations whose lives have been fostered 
by the river. 

From high up the Brahmagiri hill you can get an enchanting view 
of vast greenary dotted with golden paddy fields. The beautiful landscape 
is eyecatching-the western ghats to the south and east, the Chamundi hills 
of Mysore and the Wyanad mountains of Kerala in the distance and towards 
the far west, a glimpse of the Arabian Sea. 


KAVERI-THE RIVER OF LIFE 


117 


The rivers originating from the Western Ghat's in the south 
have very famous and beautiful waterfalls. These are 
Courtrallam falls in Tamilnadu. 



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118 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The youthful and impetuous exuberance of the Kaveri as it flows 
through the lush green land reminds one of an innocent and delightful 
young girl. It even displays different moods and special characteristics, 
like that of a maiden. In one region it is the Akhanda Kaveri, swelling 
over its banks, at another place it is the Adu Thandam Kaveri or the Kaveri 
where a goat can jump across. It tumbles softly down the steps at 
Brindavan Gardens near Mysore and is a mighty roaring river at the 
Sivasamudram Falls. Even after millions of years the Kaveri is youthfully 
vital. 

Several great centres of Tamil culture were spread on the banks of 
the Kaveri and many beautiful temples were also built there. The creativity 
that has blossomed on her banks reveals the rivers rich heritage. 

The lives and habits of the ancient people who toiled these lands 
centuries ago, even before the river was harnessed by dams, has a direct 
impact on the people of Tamil Nadu. Almost 4,000 years ago, in prehistoric 
times, single stone Age people lived in these regions, practicing 
agriculture. 

Between 1500 B.C. and 1000 B.C., this region was inhabited by people 
of neo-lithic culture. At the archaeological site of Payampali on the 
Madras-Bangalore highway, the remains of this stone Age inhabitation 
are exhibited. On display are the stone axes used for felling trees and 
the bows that were used for hunting. You will also find the cooking pots 
reassembled from pieces found on the site as well as beads of clay worn 
by the women as adornment. Evidence shows that gold was extracted from 
the Kolar gold fields even in the Stone Age. Archaeologists have also 
unearthed tools and other implements of the later period between 1000 
B.C. to 300 B.C. During this era, circular and square huts were built and 
iron weapons and tools were made. Women wore ornaments of gold, heads 
as well as glass bangles. Metal vessels were also cast, and coloured 
drawings reflecting their daily lives were also found. These revealed the 
ancient tradition of the people to work hard and reap their fortunes. This 
custom is still prevalent in the Tamil culture today. The people of Tamil 
Nadu are known for their industriousness and they have very intelligently 
availed of the waters of the Kaveri to enrich their lives. 


KAVERI-THE RIVER OF LIFE 


119 


At Bhagamandalam where the river reaches the foothills, a story goes 
to say that Tipu Sultan, one of the rulers of Mysore in the 18th century, 
while returning home from his invasion of Coorg, halted near a rock to 
rest for a while. On looking up the mountain he sighted a gushing stream. 
He was dumbstruck by the beauty of the river and bowed his head in 
reverence. Ever since, the rock is called the Salutation Stone. The deities 
of Shiva, Subramaniam, Ganesha and Vishnu are installed in the 
Bhagamandalam temple, situted at the confluence of the three streams. 
During the reign of Tipu Sultan, the temple had been converted into a 
fortress but later the Kodagu Prince Veerarajendra put silver tiles to 
replace the brass tiles when he renovated the temple. It is said that Rishi 
Agastya worshipped Lord Muruga here and received his darshan. During 
the Kaveri River festival, the pilgrims take a few grains of paddy from 
the Akshayapatram granary of the Bhagamandalam temple and put it into 
their own granaries to seek divine blessings for a better harvest. 

The river Kaveri flows right through the mountainous region of 
Coorg, which is covered with dense forests. Towards the eastern slopes 
the elevation is not very high and you will find bamboo forests and 
sandalwood trees in abundance. Also found on the hillsides are coffee 
plantations and orange groves. Wildlife is in plenty in these mountains- 
tigers, elephants, panthers, boars, bears and smaller predators as well as 
foxes and deer, roam on the 1500 kms .of Coorg country. It is at the point 
where the river leaves Coorg and joins the plains, that 2 more rivers, the 
Hemavati and the Lakshmanateertha join her. From here onwards the Kaveri 
becomes a deep and wide river. As it steadily flows past Paloor and 
Kushalnagar, the Kaveri looses its youthful friskiness and is often not 
visible for miles on end, as it meanders through the dense bamboo forests. 
It is at the junction of the three rivers where the Kunnambadi dam was 
built. It was started in the year 1911 and took 12 years to be completed. 
It is the first of the 12 dams that were constructed in the state of Mysore. 
Its builder and architect was Sir Vishveshwarayya, a man with a genius 
and a receipant of the highest award of the nation, the Bharat Ratna. He 
was the Dewan of Mysore when it was a princely state. He also founded 
the Mysore University and the Bank of Mysore and planned the Bhadravati 
Steel Plant and many other industries. 


120 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


The Kannambadi Dam is 40 meters high and 2,600 meters long. The 
surface area of the water in the reservoir is 128 square kms .and it was 
named Krishnaraja Sagar after the then king of Mysore. On its banks is 
laid out the Brindavan Gardens, with its colourful flowers and fountains. 
At night it is transformed into a fairyland with luminous lights creating 
an enchanted atmosphere as the Kaveri rippels down the stone steps. 

The river flows past Kallepura where you find the ancient 
Jangamaghatte dam built over 900 years ago. This dam, made of large 
stone slabs, does not stop the waters from flowing but slows it down and 
also regulates it. The river drops further till it reaches Sivasamudram where 
it divides itself into two rivers, the Parachukki and the Gaganachukki. The 
Parachukki comes cascading down 70 meters (230 feet )as a waterfall 
and the Gaganachukki thunders down 300 feet, foaming white and creating 
a most breathtaking sight. Falling 90 kms. down the cliff, the Kaveri is 
enchanting and untiring. The first hydro-electric project was built here 
at Sivasamudram and it generates and supplies power to the city of Mysore 
and thousands of villages around, as well as running the machinery at the 
Bhadravati Steel Plant and other mills and factories. 

The two tributaries of the Kaveri, the Kanva and the Arkavati, drain 
* 

the plateau of the Kolar gold fields considered to be the deepest in the 
world, going down to a depth of 3,962 meters (13,000 feet). The Kaveri 
flows on another 48 kms. and swirls around rocks at the beautiful spot 
of Hannadu chakra and suddently thrusts forward a hundred yards of Make 
Dhat or the ’Leap of the goat.' At this junction the bridge between the 
two rocks through which the river gushes out is just wide enough for a 
goat to leap across. A little further it is joined by the river Arkavati, which 
has travelled over a hundred miles through the mountainous region that 
divides Mysore from Tamil Nadu. 

Now joined by the Chinnar river, the second waterfall on the Kaveri 
is near the Mettur Dam and is called the Hokkenagal falls, hoke in the 
Kannada meaning smoke. The water literally bellows smoke when it hits 
the rocks below. The Mettur Dam on the Stanley Lake now handles the 
supply of water and generates electricity to the regions around it. 
Hokkenagal also has a crocodile breading farm. 


KAVERI-THE RIVER OF LIFE 


121 


The Kaveri has cleared the last of the ghats. More tributaries join 
the river from the western uplands at the mouth of the Palghat Gap and 
it begins to flow more eastward towards the Trichy plains, nurturing the 
lush green rice fields. Here, once again the third island formation is found. 
The Kaveri branches off and intact flows as a separate river named 
Coleroon, for nearly 43 kms. in a north-easterly direction. It then rejoins 
the main river. On this Island is the famous pilgrim centre of Srirangam. 
The temple of Srirangam 5 kms. north of Tirichirapalli is dedicated to 
Ranganathaswamy or Vishnu, who is seen here in his reclining form. 
Srirangam is the largest temple complex in the country. All the dynasties 
of the south have been responsible in adding to its architectural expansion. 
It consists of 21 gopurams which are all enshrined within seven concentric 
walls. The temple is associated with Ramanuja, a great exponent of 
Vaishnavism of the 12th century. The main shrine is elliptical with four 
gopurams. The most impressive hall is the one which has a thousand pillars 
and the Seshagiriraya Mandapa in the fourth gopuram is an architectural 
wonder. In the 1,000 pillared hall, the 4,000 Vaishnavite systems of the 
Aalwars are recited to the accompaniment of dance by a family of devotees 
called the Arayars. The Horse Court is a great attraction and a landmark 
in sculpture and architecture. 

Most of the construction of the Srirangam temple complex was done 
from the 14th to the 17th centuries and the kings of the Chara, Pandya, 
Chola, Hoysala and Vijayanagar dynasties have all added their bit in building 
them. The earlier Shrines of Krishna as Venugopala, built in the 13th 
century also have beautiful sculptures enshrined in them. 

The Vaikunda Ekadashi festival is celebrated here in the month of 
December and draws a large number of pilgrims. 

It is in this region of Tamil Nadu that you will find the 3 famous 
Anicuts-the Grand Anicut, the Upper Anicut and the Lower Anicut, the 
last one being on the river Koleroon about 108 kms. (67 miles) below 
the Grand Anicut. It was built in the mid-nineteenth century. These Anicuts 
are irrigation works which dam the river and some of these date back 
to over 2000 years. The Lower Anicut irriagates the paddy fields of the 
Arcot district of Tamil Nadu and it has 60 arches each with a span of 


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THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


10.5 meters(33 1/2 feet). The top of the anicut serves as a bridge across 
the river. The grand Anicut was built 1700 years earlier and it was a 
marvellous piece of achievement for it harnessed the waters of the Kaveri 
and prevented them from totally draining the Koleroon basin. This ensured 
equal distribution of irrigated water and it reached out to a million acres 
of fields. The Tanjore district of Tamil Nadu is considered to be the granary 
of the south. A little beyond the grand Anicut, the Kaveri waters divide 
again. One-stream flows past the musical teertha of Tiruvayur and meets 
the sea at Poompuhar. The other flows off southward as the Vennar. Flowing 
separately for a distance of 112 kms.(70 miles), it touches the town of 
Thanjavur. 

The famous temple of Brihadeeshwara is situated in Thanjavur. 
According to legend, aCholaking named Rajarara I (944-1013 A.D.) was 
affliated with leprosy, which according to his guru Haradatta, was due 
to a curse from his previous birth as a hunter. The guru recommended 
that to propitiate the Gods, he should construct a Shiva temple and install 
a Shivalinga brought from the river Narmada. He also asked him to build 
another temple for the goddess Brihannayaki and to make a Nandi (Bull). 
The king, accompanied by 64 merchants went to the Narmada river. But 
when he took the 'linga' out of the water, it began to grow in size. The 
temple was created by a craftsman Soma Varma over a period of 12 years. 
The Shiva linga in the temple is 1.2 meters tall and has a circumference 
of 2.1 meters. The Nandi Mandapahas a massive structure of Nandi which 
is 3.6 meters high, 5.9 meters long and 2.5 meters broad.Thanjavur is 
also famous for its Saraswati Mahal Library which has nearly 34,000 
Sanskrit and Vernacular palm-leaf manuscripts and 6,426 printed volumes, 
the Sanskrit manuscripts were collected during the 300 year old rule of 
the Nayanks and the Marathas. Thanjavur also boasts of a museum hosting 
a beautiful collection of Bronze images. 

From Thanjavur the river Vennar is further divided and one branch 
flows off as Vadavar which after flowing for a distance of 20 kms. enters 
the Vadavur reservoir. It is now called the Kannanar. This joins up with 
the Bamani and reaches the sea at Poompuhar. It is an ancient port at the 
mouth of the Kaveri and even today an early morning sight at the coast 


KAVERI-THE RIVER OF LIFE 


123 


is the rows of cataramans (fishing boats) that roll off on the choppy seas. 
Ancient evidence proves that the Tamil boatmen went as far as Sumatra 
in these boats. The Kaveri delta extends about 140 kms. along a coastline 
that is absolutely straight. 

The history of Tiruchi and Thanjavur as well as Thiruvayur abounding 
in writers, poets and temples is the history of the Kaveri. The wealth that 
flowed due to the plentiful abundance of the river gave enough time to 
the people for persuing their creative interests, giving rise to the 'arts 
that the Kaveri bred and the philosophy she inspired'. The success of any 
civilization is its natural wealth and the Kaveri brimmed with it. The 
communal interdependence was reflected in the harmonious living around 
the temples and it is the core of Tamil culture. 

The most sanctimonious festival on the Kaveri is held at 
Kumbakonam, situated in the heart of Tamil Nadu. Kumbakonam was once 
the home of intellectuals, mainly the Brahmins. It is situated on the very 
fertile banks of the Kaveri and the town boasts of abundance in art and 
literature, music and dance. The Nageshwara Temple in the heart of the 
town is one of the finest pieces of architecture representing the 9th 
century Pallava Chola transition. Miniature panels depicting the story of 
Ramayana are serialized along the base. It is called the Mahamakkam 
Tank Festival and it is as famous as the Kumbha mela held at the Triveni. 
According to popular belief, the gods headed by Brahma, visit the tank 
every 12 years to take a holy dip in the holy waters of the tank. Legend 
says that rivers like the Ganga, Yamuna, Gomati, Kaveri, Saraswati and 
Narmada, who are known for their puri ficatory qualities of washing away 
the sins of people went to Mount Kailash with a complaint to Shiva. Their 
grievence was that all the sinners washed away their sins in them. But 
in turn were they themselves going to get rid of the accumulated sins? 
Shiva asked them to bathe in the sacred Mahamakkam Tank once every 
12 years and by doing so, they would be rid of the sins of the people 
as well as all the future sins they would gather. And so by bathing in the 
tank during the festival days (the calender date is fixed depending upon 
the position of Jupiter), the pilgrim gains immensely. After bathing in 
the tank they also take a holy dip in the river. Devotional songs are sung 


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THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


and people pray at the temple. 

At Thiruvayur, where the Kaveri is joined by four other tributaries, 
the deity at the temple is Ayyaappan, meaning Lord of the Five Rivers. 
But Thiruvayur is more famous as being the birthplace of Thiagaraja, the 
renowned saint-composer of Karnatic music. 

In the Tamil month of Tai (Magha) the Thiagaraja Music Festival 
is held with great fervour in memory of the great composer (1767-1847 
A.D.). An ardent devotee of Rama he composed many hymns in his praise. 
At the shrine of the saint in Thiruvayur, known as the Panchanateshwara, 
a festival is held on a grand scale on the banks of the river and artists 
and musicians come from long distances to sing in his memory. Thiagaraja 
created devotional music that was divine. He felt that the seven swaras 
(musical notes) were born from the five faces of Shiva, Sadhyojaahaadi 
Panchavathraja Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Dha Ni Varaspatha Swara. The 
realization of this music, born from within oneself, confers the ultimate 
bliss. Music and devotion are two stands of a cord which connects the 
soul of an individual with the Supreme Soul. Thiagaraja asked, "Is there 
a better path to God than music and devotion?" This rich culture was 
nurtured on the banks of the Kaveri and it will continue to evolve as long 
as the great Kaveri flows. 


16 

The Smaller Rivers-A Source of Livelihood 


W e have covered all the major rivers of India and in doing so, not only 
experienced the vastness and beauty of India but also the rich 
cultural heritage that has made this country renowned the world over. The 
rivers are the mainstreams of the people's lives and on them depends the 
very existance of the masses. Where they flow in bounty, there is 
economic stability, a surge of culture and peaceful coexistance. Where 
they go dry, the people have to struggle for their livelihood, the population 
is sparce and very few industries thrive; where there is constant fear of 
floods, there is instability in the lives of the people and economic 
imbalance create stress. The religious sanctity of the rivers has 
strengthened the people's beliefs in the importance of being an Indian. 

There are many other smaller rivers in the Indian peninsula, some 
of which are along the long coastline of the sub-continent and they create 
a rich delta region. There are some rivers which flow inland as larger 
rivers, such as the Narmada, Kaveri, Godavari and Krishna. The coastal 
rivers are very small in length. We shall now have an aerial view of the 
small rivers that flow through the states of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra 
Pradesh and Kerala and study how they affect the simple livelihood of 
the people who live along its banks. 

The first of the rivers we will track down is the Malaprabha river 
which flows in north Karnataka. This region in the sixth century was the 
seat of a thriving dynasty-the Chalukyas. The cluster of temples on the 
banks of the Malaprabha at Pattadakkal are evidence to the Chalukyan 
sensitivity to art and beauty. Archaeological findings show that this is 
the place where all the Chalukya emperors were crowned. All the temples 


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THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


were built by the Chalukya rulers and some had the southern influence 
whereas others had the typical carvilinear towers of the north. To name 
a few, the temple of Sangameshwara was constructed in 750 A.D. by king 
Vijayvaditya. The Virupaksha temple was built by Lokamahadevi, the Queen 
of Vikramaditya, to commemorate the victorious expedition made by the 
king to the Pallava capital of Kanchi. With carvings that are beautifully 
sculptured, this temple was built by an architect Sarvasiddhi Acharya 
(whose name is inscribed on the wall of the temple), who was brought 
from Kanchi. The temple has a great resemblance to the beautiful 
Kailasanatha temple of Kanchi. It also houses a Nandi Mandapa and an 
exquisite courtyard. The beauty of the temple is enhanced as it stands 
majestically across the river front. To mention another beautiful sight 
in this region, is the Badami caves overlooking a beautiful lake. Situated 
30 kms. from the river-side temples of Pattadakal, Badami was the capital 
of the Chalukyan King Pulakesin I. The caves carved out of rock and four 
in number, have beautiful carvings on the brackets and on the ceiling. Each 
one of them has exquisitely carved sculptures of Shiva in a dancing posture, 
Vishnu measuring the universe, Durga piercing the buffalo-headed demon 
and Vishnu in his boar incarnation. 

Two other small rivers in Karnataka are the North Pennar and the 
South Pennar. Their source lies in the Nandidurga mountains of Mysore. 
While the North Pennar flows a distance of 560 kms. through the Kuddappa 
Anantapur and Nellore districts of Andhra Pradesh, the south Pennar 
meanders a length of 620 kms. through the districts of Bangalore, Sal an 
and Arcot. Also called Pinakini, both the rivers are well-known for floods, 
which occur without any warning. And this happens even when there is 
water in the Pennar for only two months! Many dams have been built across 
the two rivers and with the irrigation canals criss-crossing across the 
states, the land isrvery fertile. The North Pennar meets the Bay of Bengal 
south of Nellore and the South Pennar meets it north of Cuddalore. 

The Sharavati is another river in Mysore state which flows down from 
the Western Ghats. The very famous and beautiful waterfalls, Gersappa 
or Jog Falls is on this river. It drops down a steep cliff from a height 
of 253 meters and falls down at four levels. The four falls are named 


THE SMALLER RIVERS-A SOURCE OF LIVELIHOOD 


127 


Raja, Roarer, Rocket and Rani. A very popular tourist spot, steps lead 
you to the base of the falls and you can also reach out to the head of 
the falls and see the water cascading down in a thunderous roar. 

The Palar is a small river in Tamil Nadu. Palar means milk in Tamil 
but ironically the river is almost dry. However, the inhabitants claims that 
wherever they dig in the river bed, water flows out. The source of the 
Palar is in Mysore and its waters are used more in Mysore state than 
in Tamil Nadu, through which it flows. There is an abundant growth of 
mango, coconut and casurina trees. The casuarina helps in preventing 
erosion. The Palar meets the sea at Chaturangapatnam, once a Dutch 
occupied territory and now an important fishing port. The 
Sithanumalayaswamy temple on the river Palar at Suchindaram in Tamil 
Nadu is a very popular religious teertha. The temple is dedicated to Shiva, 
Vishnu and Brahma - Sthanu stands for Shiva, Mai for Vishnu and Ayam 
for Brahma. One legend says that Sage Atri and his wife Anasuya once 
performed a severe penance here and the three gods appeared before them 
in the form of a lingam. Brahma formed the base of the linga, Vishnu 
the middle and Shiva the top. Devotees throng the temple especially on 
festival days. Newly married couples come to receive the blessings of 
the deities. Another legend regarding the temple goes to say that when 
Devi as Kanyakumari was installed at Cape Comorin, Shiva in the form 
of Suchindram wanted to marry her. Kanyakumari agreed but with some 
conditions-that for the marriage ceremony, betel leaves without veins, 
a coconut fruit without eyes and a mango without a seed would have to 
be included. The auspicious time for the wedding was midnight. When 
the gods learnt about this they were worried since they believed that only 
if Devi remained a virgin would she be powerful enough to help them. 
They asked Rishi Narada to help them. When the auspicious time for the 
wedding arrived, Narada made the cocks crow before midnight instead 
of dawn. Shiva thinking it was too late, did not go for the wedding 
ceremony. And hence the Devi remained a virgin or Kanyakumari. She 
was so insulted by Shiva's attitude that she cursed the articles to be used 
for the wedding ceremony and they turned into shells and sand. 

Another small river flowing in Tamil Nadu is the 260 kms. long Vaigai 


128 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


river. It's source is in the Varsha valley adjoining the Cardammam hills 
of the lower Western ghats and flowing past the ancient city of Madurai 
it finally reaches the sea at Palk Straits. Though the river is brimming 
over during the monsoon season, it dries up for the last three months 
of the year. It's importance to the state of Tamil Nadu is supported by 
the joining of the river Periyar from Kerala. Madurai is an epitome of 
the temple cities of the South. Capital of the Pandyan rulers, who were 
great patrons of Tamil learning, this city holds a very important place 
in the history of Tamil Nadu for over 2000 years. Though eclipsed for 
nearly 70 years by Muslim rulers at the beginning of the 14th century, 
the Kingdom was re-established and the Madurai Nayak dynasty was 
founded. The region then thrived till the mid-eighteenth century. There 
was a sudden growth of imposing structures such as the famous Meenakshi 
temple and the Lord Sundershwara temple, with their four lofty and 
intricately carved temple towers or gopurams. The sacred tank inside 
the temple is the golden lotus tank. It is greatly venerated by the devotees 
and the life of the people of Madurai revolves around the pivotal 
Meenakshi Temple. 

The river Vaigai has been profusely and beautifully described by the 
poet Illango in his Tamil classic Silappadlikaram , comparing her to a 
young maiden. In olden times, finely carved boats plied on the river and 
when the war of superiority between the Jains and Saivites, was being 
fought, the waters of the Vaigai were used to transport their beliefs, which 
were inscribed on palm leaves and thrown in the river to float upstream. 
The Chitra festival held on the full moon day of the month of April is 
marked with bringing of the deity of Lord Alagar to Madurai. It is a time 
of midnight-long festivities, with people wearing 17th century costumes, 
' dancing and singing in abundance. This festival is also held in other parts 
of South India. 

The river Chitra flows down the Kuttalaru hills in the Tinnevelly 
district past the temple of Chitragupta situated at Kanchipuram near 
Madras. Kanchipuram is one of the seven sacred cities of India and the 
seat of the Sankaracharya, the great exponent of the Advaita philosophy. 
The deity Chitragupta is the scribe of Yama, God of Death. Chitragupta 


THE SMALLER RIVERS-A SOURCE OF LIVELIHOOD 


129 


kept an account of all the good and bad deeds of the people and these 
records decided the reward or punishment to be given to the individuals 
after death. On Chaitra Purnima, the bronze statue of the deity is taken 
in procession to the river. People bathe in the river Chitra to wash off 
their sins. 

In the fertile and prosperous Tirunivelly district of Madras flows 
another small river, only 120 kms. long, known as the Tambarapam. Since 
the waters of this river contains coppers (Tamba in Sanskrit), it has derived 
the name Tambarapani. Its source lies in the Podhigai mountain of the 
western ghats at a height of 1,838 meters. Along its course down the 
mountain the Tambarapani has many waterfalls, the biggest of them being 
Kalyanateertham, falling from a height of 90 meters. The entire length 
of the river is used for irrigation. 

The state at the southermost tip of India is Kerala, criss-crossed 
by 44 small rivers, the main three being the Periyar, the Bharathpuzha 
and the Pampa. Of these rivers, 41 are west-flowing rivers and only 3 
are east-flowing and these are tributaries of the Kaveri. The longest river 
is the Bharathapuzha (234 kms.) and the average length of the other rivers 
is only around 64 kms. They play an important role in enriching Kerala's 
culture. Today, most of the rivers are being used for irrigation and power, 
thereby greatly contributing to the economic progress of the land. 

The river Periyar has its source in the dense forests of the western 
ghats in the Sivagiri mountain range. It is navigable inland for about 160 
kms. and meets the Arabian Sea, north of Cochin after traversing a total 
length of225 kms. As early as 1896, a dam had been built in the Tiruvankur 
mountains, enabling the waters of the river to flow eastwards through a 
tunnel that is 1,766 meters long. After passing the tunnel the waters of 
the Periyar flow through Madurai district of Tamil Nadu and joins the 
river Vaigai, helping to enrich the land. This tunnel plays an important 
role of diverting the waters of the Periyar to proper use and which were 
earlier of no use. Kaladi (48 kms. north-east of Cochin) on the Periyar 
was the birth place of Adi Shankaracharya, who preached the philosophy 
of Advaita or non-dualism in the 8th century A.D. The Periyar wildlife 
games sanctuary is a popular resort on the banks of the reservoir created 


130 


THE MIGHTY AND MYSTICAL RIVERS OF INDIA 


by the dam built near the Trivankur mountains. The tourists use motor- 
boats to get a closer look at the herds of elephants and wild buffaloes 
and tigers and bears that make their way to the banks to drink water. In 
1789, when the Muslim ruler Tipu Sultan was making his aggressive 
advance beyond Alwaye to seize Travencore, it was the Periyar floods 
that forced him to retrace his steps. 

The other known river of Kerala is the Pampa which has its source 
in the mountains of Kollam district. Many little streams join up to form 
this river which is only 144 kms. long. The Kuttanad region is the paddy 
granary of Kerala and it owes its rich harvest to the Pampa river which 
irrigates the whole area. The main festival of the Hindus in Kerala is Onam, 
which falls in the month of Chingam (August-September). The ten-day 
long celebration ends in a great feat of valour and martial arts. There is 
also the famous annual boat race on the river Pampa which is a popular 
attraction not only for the local folk but for tourists from around the 
world. The most famous boat races are the Aranmulla, Haripad and Allepey. 
These races usually pitch one village against another and with great 
enthusiasm the men decorate their 'snake boats' and race along to the 
rhythmic cries of the cox. Spectators line up all along the river banks 
and cheer the participants. 

Situated on the Neeli hills of the Western Ghats, north-east of the 
river Pampa is the temple of Sabrimalai. Here, the two main festivals 
held in honour of Lord Ayappan (son of Shiva and Mohini, the enchantness 
and female form of Vishnu) are the Mandal Puja and the Makar Sankranti 
Puja. These festivals begin in November and continue till mid-January. 
Lord Ayappan is the main deity of the village Sabarimalai. The village 
is named after Sabari who belonged to the shudra caste (untouchable 
caste) and had done severe penance to have a darshan (audience) with 
Rama, incarnation of Vishnu and her wish was granted. In the course of 
his wanderings in the forest during his 14 years of exile, he came across 
Sabari. She could only offer him the wild berries of the forest Ber. Since 
she did not want him to eat unripe fruit, she bit into each one of them 
to check the taste before offering it to Rama, who accepted it 
unhestitantingly. It was Laxman who was peeved at her audacity to offer 


THE SMALLER R1VERS-A SOURCE OF LIVELIHOOD 


131 


polluted fruit to his brother. But Rama explained to Laxman that if 
someone made an offering to him out of true feelings, that offering was 
more acceptable and valuable than those richer offerings made by people 
who did it without devotion. 

The mysterious rivers of India, gathering and amassing in their 
transcendings through the ages enlighten us with a great history, a great 
culture, a great creed of people, so distinctly different from each other 
and yet all living in harmony, celebrating festivals and sharing their joys 
and sorrows with one another and with nature. It is through these travelings 
with the rivers big and small and across the country that I have ultimately 
fulfilled my search for the root and pulse of this great land that is India. 
Through these pages you will see the rivers in a wider and more humane 
perspective, rather than turning your nose away to the flowing mass of 
filth and pollution-for after all these rivers are the gifts of nature and 
it is us human beings who have scarred their beauty. 

The coming generation has a great challenge to undertake - to give 
back to the rivers and all that is beautiful in nature, their identity and make 
this world into a pollution-free heavenly abode! 


17 


Save Our Rivers-A Warning! A Plea? 


N o water in its natural state is ever one hundred percent pure. Even 
if it falls from the sky, rain gathers minute quantities of impurities 
from the atmosphere. Plants and animals can tolerate small amounts of 
impurities in their natural environment and even benefit from them. 

Man's pollution of waterways is dangerous and harmful to the plants 
and animals that thrive in it. Sewage is one pollutant that makes our rivers 
sick. Overdosed dumping and careless land use practices creates excessive 
silt, which chokes the river and kills life in it. 

There are hundreds of other causes of river pollution. Lead and Zinc 
waste from mining operations, insecticides, household detergents and 
other chemicals pour relentlessly into our streams and rivers. Some take 
their toll by poisoning wildlife immediately. Others accumulate in the 
bodies of plants and animals and eventually, prove fatal. Some of the 
chemicals can be removed from the wastes, but the treatment is expensive. 

The commonest pollutants are organic waste in sewage and 
discharges from tanneries, paper mills and other industries. Insecticides 
and detergents also provide a serious threat to the river. Since the river 
constantly flows, it provides the cheapest and simplest way of disposing 
the incredible loads of wastes that pour out of our homes and factories. 
And so, instead of a sparkling riven we have a filthy river. Fewer and fewer 
of our rivers are free of scars infflicted by human carelessness. A 
concentrated effort to develop more sewage treating plants is the need 
of the hour. We need to be less selfish and respect the streams and rivers 
before we ruin them completely. Hundreds of wildlife creatutres and plants 
will continue to flourish only so long as the rivers flow unpolluted and 
are free from man-made obstructions. 








Taking some of the important rivers from ail over the country, this 
book traces the course they took individually through the countries, and the 
areas it goes through - the journey through various historical places and the 




- 


im 


dams and bridges across it - the irrigation support it gave, the festivals that 
take place along the rivers - the significance of the river to that particular 
state or region it flows through - and more. 









£ 


Rs. 105.00 


ISBN: 81-230-0913-5 


PUBLICATIONS DIVISION 


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GOVERNMENT OF INDIA 


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